If you mean what "great" in swahili is, then they have a couple of words for it, like Nzuri, Poa, Freshi..(last one there is slang)
acunamatata
Ahsante or Asante
The word Swahili is spelled "Swahili." In Swahili, the language is called Kiswahili. Note: If you wanted to know the spelling conventions for Swahili, the language (which was originally written in Arabic script) uses the Roman alphabet and the words are spelled phonetically. The pronunciation of vowels is comparable to Italian and Spanish.. With a couple of minor exceptions the consonants are pronounced much like English consonants.
Donkey in Swahili Donkey in Swahili Donkey in Swahili
You spell read r, e, a, d in SwahiliThe Swahili word that means read is kusoma (infinitive), e.g., ninasoma (I am reading), unasoma (you are reading), nasoma kila siku (I read every day).Kusoma also means study, e.g., Nasoma historia (I study history). This usage is the same in the U.K. ("I read history at university").
You spell wedding in Swahili as w, e, d, d, i, n, g. The word in Swahili that means wedding is arusi. You spell it a, r, u, s, i.
You spell "laugh" is Swahili as follows: l, a, u, g, h.The Swahili verb that means to laugh is kucheka. Alicheka sana (He laughed a lot)
"Elderhouse" in Swahili can be translated as "nyumba ya wazee."
"Upendo"
Mbawa
acunamatata
panya
You spell Susan in Swahili the same way you spell it in ALL languages that use the Roman alphabet: s, u, s, a,n. A name for Swahili-speakers that's more common than Susan is Susana.
Chef = Mpishi
tisa
Ahsante or Asante
You spell soul in Swahili s, o, u, l.The word that means soul is roho.Roho Mtakatifu: holy spirit