Native speakers800,000 (2006)
40 million L2 speakers
congo zambia mozambique tanzania rwanda uganda kenya burundi
yes,becAUse whIle he sPeak in fr0nt of many people..he cAn EASily the atTention of them .
A lobbyist
Everyone was American. The colonies were comprised of many people from many places. About 60% of the colonies didn't speak English, but they were Americans because they came to make their lives and homes in the colonies.
The least most spoken language is also the largest smallest vocabulary and is largely filled with tiny letters and articles of punctuation. This language, known as crypticclarity, is spoken the least by the vast majority of people who speak it. Most people who speak crypticclarity are at least as old as those who speak English or Spanish or French or the many dialects of Chinese, Korean and other Indochina languages. The least known language amongst most of the world, crypticclarity is only spoken by those who speak it.
He has known how to speak Swahili :)
There is no such language as "kenyan". The official languages of the country known as Kenya are Swahili and English.
Tanzania, Kenia en Uganda.
The Waswahili or Swahili People are predominantly MUSLIMS. It is worth noting that the majority of Swahili speakers are actually not Waswahilis themselves, but people who learned the language through trade or national governance. (This is the same way that, for example, far many more people speak English than just the descendants of England because of trade and governance.)
It's not an animal, it's a language used in East Africa, or a name for the people who speak it and their culture.
Test
It's not an animal, it's a language used in East Africa, or a name for the people who speak it and their culture.
Hasheem Thabeet
Not by the majority of the inhabitants, but the few humans who live there usually speak Swahili.
Swahili isn't a religion it is the African language spoke in the east Africa
No, Swahili is not spoken in Liberia, except possibly by immigrants. For the languages of Liberia, click here.
Swahili is the most important indigenous language in Africa by a huge margin. Virtualy all people in Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda,and eastern Congo speak Swahili, a total of well over 100 million. Most people in Burundi and Rwanda also speak Swahili, and some (maybe many) in Mozambique, Malawi, Somalia, and Zambia.