Search for crossword answers and clues
Language spoken in Mbabane
Answer for the clue "Language spoken in Mbabane ", 5 letters:
swazi
Alternative clues for the word swazi
- Language of extreme characters in SW1
- Bantu language
- One of South Africa's eleven official languages
- Language most extreme characters used in Westminster?
- Neighbor of a Mozambican
- A member of a southeast African people living in Swaziland and adjacent areas
- From a landlocked kingdom of southern Africa
- One of the 11 official languages of South Africa
Word definitions for swazi in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
The term Swazi may refer to: Swazi people , a people of southeastern Africa Swazi language Swaziland , or a citizen thereof Swazi (cannabis) A strain of cannabis grown and exported from Swaziland. Swazi (brand) , an outdoor clothing brand made in New Zealand ...
Usage examples of swazi.
Withdrawing from the north of the railway with his columns, he at once started upon a sweep of that portion of the country which forms an angle between the Delagoa line and the Swazi frontier--the Barberton district.
The Swazis were all in one gang, and the Zulus in another, and the Malawians in another.
First the Zulus, followed by the Swazis, then the Ndebele, Sotho and Tsonga.
Was he not the spirit of the great chief who bound Zulu with the Swazi and the Ndebele and the Tsonga and the Sotho so that they all sat on one mat in a great singing indaba?
Then came a hurried meal, and before it was swallowed the cart was at the door, with Jantje hanging as usual on to the heads of the two front horses, and the stalwart Zulu, or rather Swazi boy, Mouti, whose sole luggage appeared to consist of a bundle of assegais and sticks wrapped up in a grass mat, and who, hot as it was, was enveloped in a vast military greatcoat, lounging placidly alongside.
In the month of January, 1901, there had been a considerable concentration of the Transvaal Boers into that large triangle which is bounded by the Delagoa railway line upon the north, the Natal railway line upon the south, and the Swazi and Zulu frontiers upon the east.
Native states whose formation from chiefdoms happened to be witnessed by Europeans in the 18th and 19th centuries include the Polynesian Hawaiian state, the Polynesian Tahitian state, the Merina state of Madagascar, Lesotho and Swazi and other southern African states besides that of the Zulus, the Ashanti state of West Africa, and the Ankole and Buganda states of Uganda.
David had also hired the chorus line from the Royal Swazi Spa to provide a floor-show.
Some had their mouths stuck into Swazi, and were spinning out great woven sheets of neurodes, larger than a tangler's web.