Afrikaans

Family: Indo-European · Africa · ISO afr · Glottolog · 7,200,000 speakers
16
Consonants
23
Vowels

The phoneme inventory below shows every sound that functions as a meaningful unit in Afrikaans — a Indo-European language spoken in Africa . With 39 phonemes, it has an average-sized inventory compared to the world's languages. Sounds marked with a dashed border (*) are marginal: they appear only in loanwords or highly specialized contexts and are not part of the core phonological system.

Consonants

approximant

lateral fricative

sibilant fricative

trill

Vowels

* Marginal phoneme — occurs only in loanwords or rare contexts.

How large is this inventory?

Smaller (11) Average (36) Larger (141)
39
phonemes

Afrikaans has 39 phonemes, placing it in the 59th percentile of languages by inventory size — roughly average for a human language.

Compared to English

For English speakers learning Afrikaans, these are the sounds that will require the most focused practice.

In Afrikaans, not in English (26)

These sounds don't exist in English — English speakers will need to learn them from scratch.

In English, not in Afrikaans (32)

English speakers learning Afrikaans won't use these sounds — they'll need to suppress them.

Most phonologically similar languages

Ranked by Jaccard similarity — the proportion of phonemes shared relative to the combined inventory of both languages.

Compare Afrikaans with another language

See which sounds are shared and which are unique.