Namibian Black German
| Namibian Black German | |
|---|---|
| Namibian Kiche Duits | |
| Kiche Duits | |
| Native to | Namibia |
| Ethnicity | Black Namibians, generally Herero and Nama |
Native speakers | None (only learned as a second language), possibly with some minor transmission to youth |
German-based creole | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | None (mis) |
| Glottolog | None |
Namibian Black German, also NBG, (German: Küchendeutsch, "kitchen German") is a pidgin language of Namibia that derives from standard German. It is nearly extinct. It was spoken mostly by Namibians who did not learn standard German during the German Empire's rule over German South West Africa from 1884 until 1915. It was never a first language. It is currently spoken as a second language by people generally over 50 years old, who today usually also speak Standard or Namibian German, Afrikaans, or English. Along with general learning in the metropolitan environments of Southern Namibia where Namibian German is spoken, NBG may be preserved nominally through parent-to-child or in-house transmission.