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The English verb miss has been incorporated into Swahili. Nakumiss, I miss you, and Nakumiss sana, I miss you a lot, or very much (I miss you like crazy). In text messages and emails it is usually spelled, strangely, mic: Nakumic.
Karibu nyumbani kwetu.N.B. -- In Swahili can also be an invitation: please come to our house.
I miss you is 'tu me manques' in French.
Je t'aime - I love you Tu me manques- I miss you
I Miss Love: Я скучаю по любви
To say "I miss him" in Swahili, you would say "Ninam-miss."
Jesus in Swahili is Yesu.
The English verb miss has been incorporated into Swahili. Nakumiss, I miss you, and Nakumiss sana, I miss you a lot, or very much (I miss you like crazy). In text messages and emails it is usually spelled, strangely, mic: Nakumic.
Heri mtoto, also means happy baby
Karibu nyumbani kwetu.N.B. -- In Swahili can also be an invitation: please come to our house.
How I Miss You Baby was created in 1969.
6 or in Swahili 6 = Sita
5 or in Swahili 5 = Tano
"I am missing you" is poor English. Correct English would be, "I miss you." Swahili has no equivalent and uses the English word: Nakumiss. (Proniminal prefix na means I, objective infix ku means you (sing.), then the main verb miss.)
Miss Me Baby was created on 2005-06-13.
To write a sentence in Swahili, you would typically start with a capital letter, use appropriate grammar rules, and end with a punctuation mark such as a period or question mark. Swahili sentences are structured subject-object-verb, so keep this in mind when constructing your sentence. Practice and exposure to the language will help you improve your writing skills.
I miss you baby.