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| Tarifit | ||
|---|---|---|
| Spoken in: | Morocco | |
| Region: | Rif | |
| Total speakers: | 3,7 million (incl. abroad Morocco) | |
| Language family: | Afro-Asiatic Berber Northern Zenati Rif Tarifit | |
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1: | none | |
| ISO 639-2: | ber | |
| ISO 639-3: | rif | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
Tarifit is a Northern Berber language of the Zenati subgroup, spoken mainly in the Moroccan Rif by about 2,5 million people.
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Tarifit is a Berber language, belonging to the Zenati subgroup of Northern Berber, and possibly the Rif subgroup of Zenati.
Tarifit is spoken mainly in the Moroccan Rif by 2,5 million people, with a few speakers across the border in Algeria and Melilla in Spain. There are also speakers of Tarifit in Morocco outside the Rif, among communities in Oujda, Tangiers, Tetouan, Larache, Fes, and Casablanca. A substantial Tarifit-speaking community exists in the Netherlands as well as in other European countries like Belgium, Germany, France, and mainland Spain. Its own speakers simply call it thamazighth, or Tamazight, a term also often applied in a broader sense to Berber languages in general.
There is a large amount of dialectal variation in Rif Berber; this can easily be seen using the dialect Atlas (Lafkioui 1997).
Tarifit\'s most noticeable differences from other Berber languages are that:
Like other Berber languages, it has been written with several different systems over the years. Most recently (since 2003), Tifinagh has become official throughout Morocco, while the Arabic alphabet and Latin alphabet continue to be used unofficially online and in various publications. However, unlike the nearby Tachelhit (Tasusit), Tarifit has little written literature before the twentieth century.
Tarifit language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
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