Kanga/Lesso - worn by women
or Kikoi/Saruni/Shuka- worn by men as loin cloth
national Zimbabwean dress is a head wrap, wraparound cloth and necklaces and earings
The cover of a corpse is commonly referred to as a "shroud." Traditionally, a shroud is a cloth or garment used to wrap the body, often for burial purposes. In some cultures, it may have specific religious or cultural significance.
It means Cheetah in Swahili!
-shenzi is a noun or adjective root meaning uncivilized, ucultured, uncouth, or even filthy (mshenzi, as noun or adjective, means an uncivilized or uncouth person).Its invariable use today is as an insult; in the 19th Century Arab and Swahili traders described themselves as Wangwana (civilized people) and upcountry Africans as Washenzi. In the Congo the dialect of Swahili used there is still called Kingwana, Although Swahili (Kingwana) is the native language of virtually all eastern Congolese, few of them are familiar with the word "Swahili."
Simba is a Swahili word that means Lion. And the lion is the King of the jungle.
It is called a Toga
piece of cloth used to wrap a dead body
cloth
The Egyptians wrap their mummies with linen cloth.
To wrap a sprained paw, you just need to wrap it tight. You can wrap it with cloth or wrap it in medical tape.
Its called a Shroud. Not the Turin Shroud that was proved to be a Fake
The women wear long dresses or wrap around skirts called pagne. The cloth is very colorful. Men wear a tunic called a boubou.
linen cloth
You take a cloth and wrap it around your loins and tie it
They wrapped them in linen cloth
out salt on the bodies and wrap it with cloth
A pencil in Swahili is called "kalamu ya risasi."