| oluLuhya | |
|---|---|
| Spoken in | Kenya, Uganda |
| Native speakers | 8 million[citation needed] (date missing)[1] |
| Language family |
Niger–Congo
|
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | luy |
Luhya (also Luyia, Luhia) is a Bantu dialect cluster spoken in the western part of Kenya by the Luhya people. Minor populations of Luhya speakers are also found in Uganda, especially in Busia. Although the Luhya principally occupy the Western province of Kenya, substantial populations have settled in the Kitale area of the Rift Valley Province. The Luhya population in Kenya is about 8,000,000, while those in Uganda and Tanzania account for about 50,000.[citation needed]
However, today, due to various social, economical, political and historical stimuli, people of Luhya descent also live in other parts of the country - and indeed, the world.
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The Luhya (pronounced loo-yah) community is composed of 16 tribes. Each tribe speaks a dialect distinctly different from the others, though several are mutually intelligible.[citation needed]
| Luhya tribe | Luhya variety [2] | ISO code | Region |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bukusu | Lubukusu | bxk | Bungoma (Kenya) |
| Idakho | Luidakho | ida | Kakamega (Kenya) |
| Isukha | Luisukha | ida | Kakamega (Kenya) |
| Kabras | Lukabarasi | lkb | Kakamega (Kenya) |
| Khayo | Olukhayo | lko | Busia (Kenya) |
| Kisa | Olushisa | lks | Butere/Mumias (Kenya) |
| Maragoli | Lulogooli | rag | Maragoli, Vihiga (Kenya) |
| Marachi | Olumarachi | lri | Busia (Kenya) |
| Marama | Olumarama | lrm | Butere/Mumias (Kenya) |
| Nyala | Lunyala | nle | Busia (Kenya) |
| Nyole | Ugandan Nyole, Kenyan Nyole |
nuj, nyd |
Vihiga (Kenya), Tororo (Uganda) |
| Samia | Lusamia | lsm | Busia, Kakamega - Uganda |
| Tachoni | Lutachoni | lts | Lugari, Malava (Kenya) |
| Tiriki | Lutirichi | ida | Vihiga (Kenya) |
| Tsotso | Olutsotso | lto | Kakamega (Kenya) |
| Wanga | Oluwanga | lwg | Butere/Mumias (Kenya) |
The Idakho, Isukha, and Tirichi speak essentially the same dialect. These are largely intelligible with Bukusu, Logoli, Nyala, and Kenyan Nyole. Other varieties with high degrees of mutual intelligibility are Ugandan Nyole and Samia; Wanga, Marama, and Kisa; Marachi and Khayo; Tachoni and Kabaras. There is a Tachoni dialect of Bukusu; it is not clear if this is the same Tachoni. Bukusu is also intelligible with Masaba, which is not considered Luhya because its speakers are ethnically distinct.
All Luhya dialects have similarities as well as differences as with all Bantu languages. Sometimes, similarities exist with other languages that are not even African. A few examples are outlined below.
| English | Kisa | Maragoli | Nyole | Wanga |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I (me) | eshie | nzi/ inze | ise | esie |
| words | amakhuwa | makuva | amang'ana, amakhuwa | amakhuwa |
| chair | eshifumbi | indeve/ endeve | indebe | eshisala |
| head | omurwe | mutwi | omurwe | om'rwe |
| money | amapesa | mang'ondo | amang'ondo, am'mondo, etsilupia | amapesa, irupia |
| English | Luhya | Ganda | Swahili | Kikuyu | Lingala | Shona | Zulu |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| person or someone | mundu, omundu | muntu | mtu | mũndũ (pronounced modo) | moto | munhu | umuntu |
| children | abana, baana, otwana, orwana, vaana | baana, abaana | wana | twana | bana | vana | umntwana |
| dog | imbwa | mbwa, embwa | mbwa | ngui (pronounced gui) | mbwa | mbwa, Imbwa | inja |
| Luhya language (e.g. Maragoli) | Same Word in Other Language | English Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Kindiki | Sindika (Italian) | A response given when summoned (like 'What is it?') |
| Nya | Nya (Hungarian) | Mother |
| Achi | Bochi (Kurd) | Why |
| Yaha | Yaha Hindi | Here |
| i-Hale | Hale Russian | Far |
| i-Mesa | Mesa (Spanish) | Table |
| Bulahe/ Vulahi | Belehe (Arabic) | Good tidings/ Stay well |
| Ikala | Ikala (Zulu) | Sit |
| Asande | Asante (Swahili) | Thanks |
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