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The most widely spoken Bantu languages
Answer for the clue "The most widely spoken Bantu languages ", 7 letters:
swahili
Alternative clues for the word swahili
- Language that "Kwanzaa" comes from
- Howl biting hard into middle of lopsided tongue
- Language widely used in East Africa
- Language in which "lion" is "simba"
- One of Kenya's official languages
- Language that gave us "Kwanzaa"
- Language in which "simba" means "lion"
- The official language of Kenya and Tanzania and widely used as a lingua franca in east and central Africa
- Tanzanian tongue
- African language
Usage examples of swahili.
By now, he could speak a very broken and limited English and some oaths in Arabic, Baluchi, Swahili, and Italian, all learned from Burton.
I on the other hand had ostentatiously ordered in Swahili: mogo, otherwise known as cassava, served with a tamarind chutney, brinjal curry, karahi karela, tarka dhal and rotis to show my cosmopolitanism.
The air was thick with tobacco smoke and the cadences of Swahili and Gujarati and Xhosa.
Philip or Philippe, fluent in French, Lingala, but not Swahili, architect of our conference, befriender of the Mwangaza and our delegates.
Though the easy-to-follow assembly holo was indeed in five languages, they turned out to be Telugu, Swahili, Pashto, Malayalam and Hakka.
He had attempted to quell an uprising of the wild Masai and the Swahili.
The Masai and the Swahili will join them in bringing back slavery, the hunting of heads, cannibalism.
The Masai and Swahili, commanded by The Shimba, were ready to join in a quick invasion.
He did not seem to know that the fierce Masai and Swahili warriors were being worked into frenzy for a new descent upon his village.
His English was strange, because he had spoken Swahili and Chinese in his own Earthside schools, but he was very patient and exact about everything.
In the extinct Terran dialect of Swahili, Maasai Laibon means King or Chief of the Maasai, and Tembo Laibon means King or Chief of the Elephants.
Bukoba or Mandaka have any special meaning in the Maasai or Swahili dialects.
I have checked all Swahili and Maasai dictionaries in my language banks, and in those on Deluros VIII.
Shadows moved beyond the curtains and whispers spoke softly amidst the silence in a subtonal language that could have been English or Swahili.
Swahili, the language of a Mohammedan Bantu people of Zanzibar and the East coast of Africa, knowing that they would not understand it.