blessed
or
When someone sneezes, you can say "Barikiwa" which would be "Bless you".
Correction: "Bless you" would be ubarikiwe, a subjective form perhaps better translated as "may you be blessed." Barikiwa is a verb stem for the the passive form of kubariki, to bless, , i.e., "to be blessed"; it does not include the affixes indicating person and tense. The noun for bariki is baraka, blessing.No, in Swahili "kiSwahili" means the Swahili language. The word for teacher in Swahili is "mwalimu."
Umoja means unity in Swahili.
Hate in Swahili is translated as chuki.
Rafiki means "friend" in Swahili.
You can say "Nakukosa" in Swahili to mean "I miss you."
Baraka, both singular and plural.
Not a Swahili word.
Not a word in Swahili
In swahili,Imani mean's ''Faith''
"Love" in Swahili is "upendo."
It means Cheetah in Swahili!
No, in Swahili "kiSwahili" means the Swahili language. The word for teacher in Swahili is "mwalimu."
Hate in Swahili is translated as chuki.
Umoja means unity in Swahili.
Rafiki means "friend" in Swahili.
You can say "Nakukosa" in Swahili to mean "I miss you."
"When"