This appeared in the English to Swahili section but the word is neither Swahili not English. From its formation, ama + sango, it appears to be an Nguni word from South Africa. Let's hope an Nguni-speaker (e.g., Zulu, Xhosa) willprovide the answer.
"Amasango" means "doors" in some African languages. It can also symbolize opportunities, beginnings, or transitions in different contexts.
"Shakain" is not a commonly recognized term in African languages. It is possible that it may be a name or word specific to a particular African language or dialect that is not widely known.
The African Luhya term for the English word 'African' is "omumalii".
"Esengo" is a word from the Bantu language group, specifically spoken by the Kongo people in Central Africa. It roughly translates to "joy" or "happiness."
"Okusamula" in Luhya may mean to protect or to defend in English.
The African Luhya word for the English word chew is Okhunyanya.
king
it means to invite
it means hello
African American
A genus of African ground squirrel.
it means africans were slaves
Do you mean Afrikaans? In which case: kombuis
coota coota
"Shakain" is not a commonly recognized term in African languages. It is possible that it may be a name or word specific to a particular African language or dialect that is not widely known.
If you mean Yebo, it is the Zulu word for 'yes'
It is an African word that I don't and can't find anywhere
"Ubuntu" is a South African word for "Humanity among others".