Kiswahili or Swahili
Swahili is the African language derived from a mixture of Arabic and Bantu languages. It is spoken widely in East Africa and serves as a lingua franca in the region, blending elements of both Arabic vocabulary and Bantu grammar.
Swahili is primarily based on the Bantu language, with influences from Arabic, Persian, Portuguese, English, and other languages.
Swahili is primarily a Bantu language, with significant influences from Arabic due to historical trade and interaction along the East African coast. It also includes some borrowings from English, Portuguese, and Hindi.
Swahili developed as a trade language along the East African coast, blending local Bantu languages with Arabic due to extensive trade with Arab merchants. Over time, Swahili evolved into a distinct language with its own unique grammar, vocabulary, and writing system. It further expanded through interactions with European colonizers and has grown to become a widespread language in East Africa.
Swahili is mainly influenced by the Arabic culture due to historical trade interactions along the East African coast. Additionally, Swahili has elements of Bantu languages spoken in the region, as many Swahili words have Bantu origins.
Africa is a continent made up of 54 different countries, each with its own languages and dialects. Therefore, there isn't a single word to represent "lucky" in African languages. It would depend on the specific African language you are referring to.
Swahili is primarily based on the Bantu language, with influences from Arabic, Persian, Portuguese, English, and other languages.
They made a language called Swahili. Its a mix of African language and Arabic
They made a language called Swahili. Its a mix of African language and Arabic
trade
The Bantu Homelands Citizenship Act of 1970 made every black South African, irrespective of actual residence, a citizen of one of the Bantustans, thereby excluding blacks from the South African body.
Swahili is mainly made up of Bantu and Arabic. Other minor languages include Hindi and Portuguese. And currently, English too.
Swahili is primarily a Bantu language, with significant influences from Arabic due to historical trade and interaction along the East African coast. It also includes some borrowings from English, Portuguese, and Hindi.
Swahili vocabulary springs from the Arabic language, made through more than many centuries of exchange with Arabic-speaking peoples
Swahili developed as a trade language along the East African coast, blending local Bantu languages with Arabic due to extensive trade with Arab merchants. Over time, Swahili evolved into a distinct language with its own unique grammar, vocabulary, and writing system. It further expanded through interactions with European colonizers and has grown to become a widespread language in East Africa.
Africa is a continent made up of 54 different countries, each with its own languages and dialects. Therefore, there isn't a single word to represent "lucky" in African languages. It would depend on the specific African language you are referring to.
because they did not no about language and they express his/her felling by making art
There is no such language as Eastern Arabic. Even if you meant to say Iraqi Arabic, there are fundamental differences between Arabic and Turkish. The only commonality between them is that between 5-10% of Turkish is made of Arabic loanwords. Everything from basic phrases, verb conijugations, declensions, etc. are different.