Arabic is not a significant language in either couhntry. For the languages of Kenya, click here.For the languages of Nigeria, click here.
English is a language is spoken by millions of people in Uganda Kenya and Tanzania. Swahili is also spoken by millions of people.
For the languages of Nigeria, click here.For the languages of Kenya, click here.
The language spoken in southern Kenya and Northern Tanzania by the Maasai people (please note 2 a's) is the Maa language. It is spoken by nearly 1 million people. With reference to the 2 a's, it is so because Maasai means the 'people who speak the Maa language. Mainly it is a spoken language and not used in writing very much
NO. The most commonly spoken languages in Kenya are English and Swahili, along with more local African languages. The Spanish never had any major outposts in eastern Africa or the Indian Ocean, so there is no push in Kenya for people to learn Spanish.
the masai of Kenya speak maa. this is mainly a speaking language...not a writing language.
Tanzania has no official language, but I think you're thinking about Swahili, which is official in Kenya and widely spoken in Tanzania.
There is a small group of French speakers in Kenya, but the official languages are Swahili and English.
Swahili is spoken as a significant language in several countries in East Africa, but the two countries where it is predominantly spoken are Tanzania and Kenya. Swahili is the official language in Tanzania and one of the official languages in Kenya.
Obama is surname based on a given name from the Dholuo language spoken by the Luo people of Kenya it is based on the verb "bam".
The language of the Luo people in Kenya is also called Luo in English (Kiluo in Swahili). The people of the same tribe across the border in Tanzania are called the Jaluo. There is almost surely a special form for "the Luo language" in Luo, but the answer must come from a contributor who knows Luo.
No, Swahili is not spoken in Nigeria, except possibly by a very small number of immigrants. For the languages of Nigeria, click here.