Swahili Language Phonology - Search results - Wiki Swahili Language Phonology
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Swahili Ajami script refers to the alphabet derived from Arabic script that is used for the writing of Swahili language. Ajami is a name commonly given... |
Swahili, also known by its local name Kiswahili, is a Bantu language originally spoken by the Swahili people, who are found primarily in Tanzania, Kenya... |
Kiingereza-Kisimbiti-Kiswahili / Simbiti-English-Swahili and English-Simbiti-Swahili Lexicon. Languages of Tanzania Project, LOT Publications Lexicon Series... |
Ee Mungu Nguvu Yetu (category Articles containing Swahili (macrolanguage)-language text) highest aspirations of the people as a whole. See Help:IPA/Swahili and Swahili language § Phonology. "Selecting Kenya's National Anthem". State House. Archived... |
Mungu ibariki Afrika (category Articles containing Swahili (macrolanguage)-language text) sing the national anthem in Tanzanian law. See Help:IPA/Swahili and Swahili language § Phonology. Lyimo, Karl (21 March 1990). "National symbols? What happened... |
taken place in such languages as Arabic, English, German and Portuguese. The phonology of Yao is shown below. Like most Bantu languages, tone plays a role... |
Comoros. Like Swahili, the Comorian languages are Sabaki languages, part of the Bantu language family. Each island has its own language, and the four... |
variation. [z] occurs in the language, but is mainly heard as an allophone of /s/ after nasal sounds, or as a result of Swahili loanwords. Hehe at Ethnologue... |
Africa's 12 official languages in 1994. According to Ethnologue, it is the second-most widely spoken of the Bantu languages, after Swahili. Like many other... |
German spellings. The language is sometimes distinguished as Hazane, "of the Hadza".[citation needed] Tindiga is from Swahili watindiga "people of the... |
Kenyan English (category Languages of Kenya) up before becoming a colony in 1920. Swahili had been established as a trade language in most parts of the Swahili Coast at the time of colonization, and... |
reflect a difference in the length of production. Swahili: bei, and Swahili: ngao - These Swahili words have been borrowed into Kisi and pronounced with... |
Somali, Amharic, Oromo, Igbo, Swahili, Hausa, Manding, Fulani and Yoruba, which are spoken as a second (or non-first) language by millions of people. Although... |
All languages rely on the process of semiosis to relate signs to particular meanings. Oral, manual and tactile languages contain a phonological system... |
Minimal pair (category Phonology) delimiters. In phonology, minimal pairs are pairs of words or phrases in a particular language, spoken or signed, that differ in only one phonological element... |
Coast Bantu (of zones E & G). Some of these languages (F21, most of E50, and some of J) share a phonological innovation called Dahl's law that is unlikely... |
in Bantu, the Swahili language is called Kiswahili, while the Swahili people are Waswahili. Likewise, in Ubangian, the Zande language is called Pazande... |
Martin's description of the language, as well as from such languages as Estonian, Inuktitut, Turkish, Russian, and Swahili. David J. Peterson and his development... |
Portugal, and has kept some Celtic phonology. With approximately 230 million native speakers and 25–30 million second language speakers, Portuguese has approximately... |
Tone (linguistics) (redirect from Tone (phonology)) voice. In some languages, such as Burmese, pitch and phonation are so closely intertwined that the two are combined in a single phonological system, where... |