Swahili is a Bantu language that developed from Sabaki.
Some words are derived from Arabic through more than 12 centuries of contact with Arabic-speaking people.
Other languages that loaned words to Swahili are:
Persian
German
Portuguese
English
French
CLARIFICATION: Swahili is a Bantu language with a basic Bantu-type grammar and a vocabulary drawn from many Bantu languages. There is no language in East Africa called Sabaki. By far the greatest number of non-Bantu words in Swahili have Arabic origins, but in recent decades English has been catching up.
Swahili is a mixture of Bantu languages, Arabic, and some words from other languages such as Persian, Hindi, Portuguese, and English. It developed along the East African coast through trade interactions between these different linguistic groups.
Swahili is mainly a Bantu language, with significant influences from Arabic due to historical trading relationships along the East African coast.
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.
Creole languages are actually based on a mixture of different languages, including Spanish and French, but they are not exclusively a blend of those two languages. Creole languages have developed in various parts of the world where people of different linguistic backgrounds have interacted and created a new language to communicate.
Swahili is a blend of Bantu and Arabic cultures. The Bantu influence is reflected in the language's grammar and vocabulary, while Arabic influence is seen in the language's vocabulary, due to historical trade interactions along the Swahili coast.
Swahili is a mixture of Bantu languages, Arabic, and some words from other languages such as Persian, Hindi, Portuguese, and English. It developed along the East African coast through trade interactions between these different linguistic groups.
Swahili is mainly a Bantu language, with significant influences from Arabic due to historical trading relationships along the East African coast.
There is no such language. You are probably thinking of Afrikaans, which is a dialect of Dutch that includes some loan words from English and African languages, but not enough to call it a mixture of those languages.
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.
Yes, Swahili is an indigenous Bantu African language, but as Arabic, Persian, and Indian traders came, their vocabulary intermingled with the Swahili language. Swahili was also originally written in the Arabic alphabet, with further added to the misconception that it's a mixture of Arabic and Bantu languages.It is similar to the way English was bombarded with Latin and French words and roots for hundreds of years. However, Swahili is still not considered to be a creole (mix of languages with native speakers) by linguists, just as English is not considered to be a creole (mix of Germanic and Romance languages).Furthermore, even if Swahili were a creole, it would still be indigenous to Africa because it would have been "born" in Africa.
Creole languages are actually based on a mixture of different languages, including Spanish and French, but they are not exclusively a blend of those two languages. Creole languages have developed in various parts of the world where people of different linguistic backgrounds have interacted and created a new language to communicate.
Italian, like French, Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian, is a Romance language; that is a language derived from Vulgar Latin, a mixture of Latin and local languages which developed in parallel with classical Latin.
Swahili is a blend of Bantu and Arabic cultures. The Bantu influence is reflected in the language's grammar and vocabulary, while Arabic influence is seen in the language's vocabulary, due to historical trade interactions along the Swahili coast.
Creole is a "Natural language" created by the fusion of two cultures, for example Louisiana Creole which is based on the French language and is a mixture of French, Spanish and African languages. A natural language is one that has been learned naturally through speech like English or French, unlike a computer code.
A creole language is a stable natural language developed from a mixture of different languages. Creolized languages typically arise in situations where speakers of different languages come into contact and need to communicate, leading to the development of a new, blended language with simplified grammar and vocabulary.
The language, Ge'ez, was a mixture of South Arabian, Greek, and Cushitic languages.
There is no language that is a mixture of Arabic Persian Portuguese Hindu and Bantu languages.