I hear that most young urban Ethiopians speak Amharic more than their tribal/ethnic languages.
Is this true? Any Ethiopia expert here?
@Apollo Here is the map explaining to you which regions/zones speak Amharic or not.
This is the number of people that speak it as a first language (not second):
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The Amhara basically colonized the Oromo and created Ethiopia in the process. This map makes it even more clear why they feel so threatened by the decreasing relevance of Amharic in Oromia. I never thought that there were many Shewan Oromo who speak no Amharic, let alone entire woredas in Shewa not speaking it.
The Amhara basically colonized the Oromo and created Ethiopia in the process. This map makes it even more clear why they feel so threatened by the decreasing relevance of Amharic in Oromia. I never thought that there were many Shewan Oromo who speak no Amharic, let alone entire woredas in Shewa not speaking it.
I think that map is fake.
Many Ethiopian languages only have like 500K-1 million speakers and are spoken in a tiny area. I can't believe those types would not know Amharic.
I think that map is fake.
Not really once you learn the history behind it. Tulama Oromo people only speak Amharic purely while rest of Shewan Oromos who live on the farms don't know Amharic. Only within urban areas use it as a working language.
Because they don't put much resources on the SNNP region. They have puppet tribes like Omotic and Sidamo to keep the region under control from other minorities. They recently started a silk project in Hawassa.
What’s up @Factz ..
The Shawan Oromo are mostly from the Tulama clan. They all speak Afan Oromo for as a first language. It’s those who live in Finfinne and surrounding salale area that speak more Amharic. The only Oromos who’ve completely been transformed into speaking Amharic as a first language are sub clans of Wallo up north. The warra Yejju, Warra himano etc live further north and only speak Amharic. The warra qallu, babbu etc in southern Wallo speak Oromo. And then you have the Rayya in Tigray. Half the population speak Amharic as a first language, the other half speak tigrayan and a small amount of elders still speak Oromo.
Many Ethiopian languages only have like 500K-1 million speakers and are spoken in a tiny area. I can't believe those types would not know Amharic.
@Afran Qallo
Could you tell me which Oromo sub clans live in Harar? Is it the Ala and Nole Oromos? Are the only Oromos who live in Harar your Afran Qallo?
I hear that most young urban Ethiopians speak Amharic more than their tribal/ethnic languages.
Is this true? Any Ethiopia expert here?