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Amharic
Spoken in: Ethiopia
Region: East Africa
Total speakers: 21 million (17.4 million native speakers)
Ranking: ...
Genetic
classification:
Afro-Asiatic

  Semitic   South    Transversal     Amharic

Official status
Official language of: Ethiopia
Regulated by: --
Language codes
ISO 639-1am
ISO 639-2amh
SILAMH


1 Introduction

Amharic (አማርኛ) is a Semitic language spoken in Northern Central Ethiopia, where it is the official language. Outside Ethiopia, Amharic is the language of some 2.7 million emigrants (notably in Egypt, Israel and Sweden). It is written using a writing system called fidel or abugida, adapted from the one used for the now-extinct Ge'ez language.

2 Amharic Phonology

The chart below uses SAMPA symbols where feasible, with the exception that ejectives are marked by '’' (apostrophe/right-single-quote).

Consonants
  bilabial dental palatal velar glottal
stops voiceless p t c k ʔ
voiced b d J g  
ejective p’ t’ c’ k’  
affricate   ts’      
fricatives voiceless f s š   h
voiced   z ž    
nasals m n ñ    
liquids w l j    
flap/trill   r      
Vowels
  front central back
high i   u
mid e ə o
low ä a  

3 Amharic Abugida Symbols ("Fidels" ፊደል)

Please note that this chart is incomplete. Some phonemes have more than one series of possible symbols; only illustrative examples for /k/ and /h/ are shown (the latter has four series!). While the consonants have been grouped by manner of articulation (refer to the phoneme chart above), the vowels are listed in citation order. The citation form for each series is the consonant+/E/ form, i.e. the first column of fidels. You will need a font that supports Ethiopic, such as GF Zemen Unicode (available at ftp://ftp.ethiopic.org/pub/fonts/TrueType/gfzemenu.ttf ), in order to view the fidels.

Non-speakers are often disconcerted or astonished by the remarkable similarity of many of the symbols. This is mitigated somewhat because like many SemiticSemitic is a controversial adjective which in common parlance refers either to specifically Jewish things or to things originating among speakers of Semitic languages or people descended from them, and in a linguistic context to the northeastern subfamily languages, Amharic uses triconsonantal roots in its verb morphology. The upshot of this is that a fluent speaker of Amharic can decipher written text by observing which consonants are noted, with the vowel variants being supplemental detail. (T dmnstrt, "nglsh spkrs cn rd vwllss txt, t!)

Chart of Amharic Fidels
  ä u i a e SchwaIn linguistics and phonology, the schwa is the vowel sound in many lightly pronounced unaccented syllables in English words of more than one syllable. It is most easily described as sounding like the British English "er" or the American English "uh". o
p
t
c
k
b
d
J
g
p’
t’
c’
k’
7
ts’
f
s
S
h
z
Z
m
n
ñ
w
l
j
r




Non User