In prayer to God:
Uokee roho zetu. ([you] save our souls).
Uokee is the second-person-singular subjunctive (used in polite address) of the verb kuokoa, to save, commonly used in a religious sense. A simple imperative would be okoa roho zetu, but the polite form seems a better choice for a prater to God.
Save our ships or save our souls.
the word for save is ila.
You say memorize in Swahili like this: kukariri
You can say "Nakukosa" in Swahili to mean "I miss you."
The Swahili word is 'Na'
To say "I miss him" in Swahili, you would say "Ninam-miss."
To say "hot" in Swahili, you would say "ya moto."
How does one say "new beginning" in Swahili
If you go to google translate it will tell you and say it but i will spell how it is in Swahili chaise
"Bad" in Swahili is "mbaya."
reading in Swahili is masomo
The word for "answer" in Swahili is "jibu."