Languages of Mauritius
The Constitution of the Republic of Mauritius does not mention any official language. The Constitution contains one statement in Article 49 that states that "the official language of the Assembly shall be English but any member may address the chair in French" which indicate that English and French are official languages of the National Assembly (parliament) only.
Languages of Mauritius | |
---|---|
National | Mauritian Creole |
Recognised | English and French |
Minority | Bhojpuri, Tamil, Chinese, Telugu, Hindi-Urdu |
Signed | Mauritian Sign Language |
Keyboard layout |
While the lingua franca is Mauritian Creole, French is spoken by a majority of Mauritians while English is used in Government and education.
English is used as the prime medium of instruction in public schools while French is also a common language in education and the dominant language of media.[2] According to the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie, 72.7% of the Mauritians were French speakers in 2005.[3] Mauritius shares this distinction of being both English- and French-speaking with Canada, Cameroon, Dominica, Rwanda, Seychelles and Vanuatu. Being both an English-speaking and French-speaking nation, Mauritius is a member of both the Commonwealth of Nations and La Francophonie.
Other languages spoken in Mauritius mainly include Bhojpuri, Tamil, Telugu, Hindi-Urdu, and Chinese. Arabic is taught in mosques around Mauritius. The Mauritian Sign Language is the language of the deaf community. Most Mauritians are at least bilingual, if not trilingual or quadrilingual.
References
- "Africa :: MAURITIUS". CIA The World Factbook.
- "Coexistence International at Brandeis University" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-07-04.
- (in French) La Francophonie dans le monde 2006–2007 published by the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie. Nathan Archived 2018-01-14 at the Wayback Machine, Paris, 2007.