It's pronounced the same as in English.
Jina langu ni . . . (My name is . . .) Naitwa . . . (I am called . . .)
Lisa has no meaning as a Swahili word, but, as in English, is a common female's name. It is pronounced as in English.
你好, 我叫Haley。 (Nǐ hǎo, wǒ jiào Haley)
"kivuli"- i looked it up myself to use it as a name in a story xxxxx
Mike (name) - Maiki Michael - Mikaeli Mic (microphone) - Mikrofoni
Jina langu ni . . . (My name is . . .) Naitwa . . . (I am called . . .)
Hallo. Ich heisse Haley.
Lisa has no meaning as a Swahili word, but, as in English, is a common female's name. It is pronounced as in English.
你好, 我叫Haley。 (Nǐ hǎo, wǒ jiào Haley)
"kivuli"- i looked it up myself to use it as a name in a story xxxxx
Mike (name) - Maiki Michael - Mikaeli Mic (microphone) - Mikrofoni
The origin of the name Clark in English is clerk (pronounced clark in Britain). In Swahili a clerk is karani.
Jina langu ni Veronica
Hola, mi llamo haley soy un cabron.
You say memorize in Swahili like this: kukariri
You can say "Nakukosa" in Swahili to mean "I miss you."
The Swahili word is 'Na'