Kiswahili Kidato Cha I Study Notes
Swahili (or Kiswahili) is a musical language and quite easy to learn, whose origins date back more than 1,000 years, and it is spoken along the eastern coast of Africa.
It developed when African-Bantu and Arab-Persian elements came into contact, spreading progressively throughout the continent as a trade language along the routes travelled by caravans that departed from the ports of Zanzibar, Bagamoyo and Kilwa, heading into the heart of Africa in search of gold, ivory and slaves.
The name Swahili derives from the Arabic word “sahel”, which means “coast”, precisely because the language
And culture produced were found in the early settlements established by Arab and Shirazi traders along the shores of the Indian Ocean.
Initially written in Arabic characters, when Christian missionaries arrived they transliterated it, introducing the use of the Latin alphabet.
Kiswahili Kidato Cha I Study Notes
Over the centuries it has been enriched by Portuguese, German and, above all, English contributions. Like all other languages of the Bantu family, it has a different logic to the European languages we are accustomed to using.
There are no masculine, feminine or neutral genders, but 19 noun classes corresponding to 19 verb/pronoun classes,
And 19 adjective classes. Unlike Western languages, Swahili does not change suffixes (the ends of words), but the prefixes (the beginnings of words).
An example is “mtoto wangu anasoma” (my child reads); “watoto wangu wanasoma” (my children read). It may seem complicated, but in fact,
Once we have mastered a logic so different from that of our own language, it is far from difficult. Stress usually falls on the penultimate syllable unless it is a “y”, in which case stress falls on the third from last; “j” is read like a hard “g”.
Learning a few words and some simple phrases will be a great help when staying in Tanzania: locals will be amazed and flattered by the fact that a “mzungu” (a European) has gone to the trouble of learning some of the local language.
Kiswahili Kidato Cha I Study Notes
Get form one kiswahili study notes all topics from this post and other more secondary notes from our site
To view this form one kiswahili study notes for a topic please hit links bellow
MADA 1:
MADA 2:
MADA 3:
MADA 4:
MADA 5:
MADA 6:
MADA 7:
MADA 8:
Really appreciate you sharing this post.Really looking forward to read more. Keep writing.
Thank you ever so for you blog. Keep writing.
Enjoyed every bit of your post.Really looking forward to read more. Much obliged.
Thanks again for the blog post.Much thanks again. Really Cool.
Great blog. Will read on…
Great, thanks for sharing this blog post. Really Cool.