Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / NewStats: 3,201,419 members, 7,978,340 topics. Date: Friday, 18 October 2024 at 06:16 AM |
Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Culture / Let's Learn Swahili (15708 Views)
Let's Learn Sign Language / What Do They Call Twins In Your Tribe: Let's Learn (2) (3) (4)
(1) (2) (3) (4) (Reply) (Go Down)
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 7:58am On Sep 15, 2015 |
soilsista:You are a fast learner, Umesoma haraka |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by soilsista(f): 4:53pm On Sep 15, 2015 |
muafrika:Asante sana. I try Please translate the bolded part... |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 10:15pm On Sep 15, 2015 |
soilsista:It means you have learnt fast, 1 Like |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 11:13am On Sep 16, 2015 |
muafrika:Mlipotelea wapi mkiwa na gallivant? The place has become too boring without my fellow countryfolk |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by soilsista(f): 1:20pm On Sep 17, 2015 |
pkjag:So, when are we writing our test? |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 6:37pm On Sep 17, 2015 |
soilsista:Haha, aki i've been so busy, that I only get time to make one stop visits, maybe will come around in the weekend. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 12:04am On Sep 19, 2015 |
pkjag:Nilipoteza pass word ya Email. Nilikuwa nikifollow kama guest once in a While. Gallivant labda ameenda majuu kutuletea picha zingine. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 8:28pm On Sep 19, 2015 |
muafrika:Waah, that's stressing even thinking about it, e-mail connects every profile on the net, sasa ulirecover aje? |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 9:35pm On Sep 19, 2015 |
pkjag:True, Ilikuwa hard kutumia phone kurecover lakini nilipo try na desktop baadaye ika faulu. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by soilsista(f): 2:58pm On Sep 24, 2015 |
pkjag:We'll be waiting... |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by truenyaks(f): 7:12pm On Nov 02, 2015 |
pkjag:I'm Kenyan, and I would like to clarify that when one says "naomba uondoke" it means "I request you to leave" and not I pray.. which is a direct translation. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 11:20am On Nov 12, 2015 |
truenyaks:True truenyaks, i directly translated there, please feel free to contribute more, I cannot be teaching all this on my own. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 3:44am On Nov 16, 2015 |
Swahili numbers, fromhttps: haikudeck.com 1 Like
|
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Pidggin(f): 7:23am On Nov 16, 2015 |
Hello, i commend your effort on exporting your language. Good thing some poeple like me are interested, but while you are teaching us your language I hope you are also making effort to learn ours, I have not seen any of your monikers in our language threads. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 9:27pm On Nov 19, 2015 |
Pidggin:Ok, i understand a little pidgin from the many naija movies I've watched while growing up and the many music videos that get played here, so am well covered 3 Likes |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by AyoniAye: 7:20am On Jan 29, 2016 |
Pidggin: I am Nigerian. Its quite uneducated to state that Kiswahili is the language of Kenya or Tanzania. Basic research will show that Kiswahili is a Bantu language which is a branch of the Niger-Congo language family. There is no ethnic group that lays claim to Kiswahili; it is simply the language of the African people. This is in sharp contrast to, for example, Yoruba or Igbo which--despite being members of the Niger-Congo language family--is strictly the language of the Yoruba/Igbo people. PKJAG, as a teacher (and might I add a superb one) you need to educate more Africans who are interested in [/i]our[i] language on the African origins and that it is not restricted to a specific ethnic group like nearly all indigenous African languages are. When better educated, I have no doubt that all Africans will seek to learn Kiswahili for purposes of greater unity, rather than European colonial languages. Asante sana!! 1 Like |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 10:30pm On Feb 01, 2016 |
AyoniAye: Actually the waSwahili tribe does exist although it is highly conflated, but they number less than 2 million, they do speak the language as their first language, but the distinction sadly ends there because no one seems to agree who these people are. In the Kenyan and Tanzanian coast where there are dozens of Swahili dialects and accents, there are bantu tribes who speak their own coastal bantu languages in addition to Swahili, and there are also those who only speak Swahili may be because they were assimilated or lost their languages due to this. Now the dispute comes in between those who are primarily Swahili speakers and those who speak a very close form of Swahili. Yeah and some East African Arabs too claim that they are the real Swahili speakers. But if you ask me, the real ones are the ones found in Lamu island in the Northern coast of Kenya. They speak the most ancient dialect of Swahili which is a bit different from the standard one that we use today (which comes a little far south in Zanzibar island). BTW Even the Comoro language in the Comoros islands is kinda like a Swahili dialect. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 4:33am On Feb 02, 2016 |
pkjag:There is a tribe in the Congo that speaks a Swahili dialect too as their first language. It would seem lie AyoniAye says that Swahili was a widely distributed language long before our colonial days. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 8:45pm On Feb 02, 2016 |
Muafrika2:Really, haven't heard of them, maybe it's the Arab slave traders who were left there after colonization and intermarried with the local tribes. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 8:59pm On Feb 02, 2016 |
pkjag: Have you heard a documentary based in Congo in which they speak some kind of Swahili that's very different grammatically? That's the one. You heard words with Alot of the prefix "ba". |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Kenyanna: 9:16pm On Feb 02, 2016 |
AyoniAye:The Waswahili are an actual tribe. pkjag:People in Eastern Congo adopted Swahili because they are culturally & geographically closer to Tanzanians than lingala speaking Kinshasa. Many of them have lived in Tanzania as refugees for many years & returned to Congo speaking swahili. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 9:57pm On Feb 02, 2016 |
Kenyanna:Yeah i know the guys but I don't think Muafrika was talking about them, you see before the colonial expansion, the Zanzibari arabs/swahili traders went as far inland as the DRC to trade slaves and ivory, some got left, some returned and inter-married and that's why the eastern congolese guys speak Swahili. Now what Muafrika's saying is that there's an actual tribe that speaks the coastal version of Swahili which we both know is spoken only on the east african coast, those eastern congolese guys just speak with the typical mainland Tanzanian accent, I would be very surprised if i visited a villlage/town in Eastern DRC where everybody spoke with the beautiful and melodious coastal swahili accent . |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 10:03pm On Feb 02, 2016 |
Muafrika2:Oh ni hawo, but that's how they speak even in Kinshasa and Kisangani although not as proficiently as the ones in the Eastern DRC. Though there are a few who speak quite fluently without that funny accent, I think they are the ones who live hapo near Lake Tanganyika. And also some Burundian and Rwandese people. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 4:27am On Feb 03, 2016 |
pkjag:Yeah, though am not sure of their precise identity. Their Swahili dialect should be the one called Kiungwana or Kitanga. It may be an adopted language as Kenyanna suggests, but not that recent. |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by nguvumali: 1:28pm On Feb 03, 2016 |
pkjag:Mkuu na huku upo, furaha kukuona |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 8:50pm On Feb 03, 2016 |
nguvumali:Haha huyu ni nani tena, hebu jitambulishe |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by Nobody: 8:54pm On Feb 03, 2016 |
Muafrika2:Oh yes i've heard about the Kiungwana, always wondered how congolese musicians like Angela Chibalonza and Solomon Mkubwa spoke so fluently maybe ni hawo. 1 Like |
Re: Let's Learn Swahili by nguvumali: 1:07pm On Jul 11, 2017 |
mimi nguvumali wa Kibiti mkoani Lindi
|
Hey See More About Igala People / Kola Nut Ritual In Igboland / Ooni Ogunwusi Visits Abdulfatah Ahmed
(Go Up)
Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 55 |