In Shona, "be mine" can be expressed as "nive wangu." In Ndebele, you would say "ube yami." Both phrases convey a desire for someone to be in a romantic relationship.
English, Shona and Ndebele
To a greater extent
Shona: Mhoro Ndebele: Sawubona English: Hello
That's a toughie. IN SHONA You could say "munhu anochengeta"-lliterally someone who protects/looks after. In Ndebele....?
Mainly Shona, Ndebele and English
Shona, ndebele, xhosa and zulu
The Shona group are to be found in South Western Zimbabwe and Botswana. The Ndebele are to be found in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Botswana
English is the Official language of Zimbabwe. If you are referring to one of the native languages, you would need to specify which one. Here is a list of languages spoken in Zimbabwe:DombeEnglishFanagaloKalangaKundaLoziManyikaNambyaNdauNdebeleNsengaNyanjaShonaTongaTsoaTsongaTswaTswanaVendaZimbabwe Sign Language
The Shona and the Ndebele are the main racial groups in Zimbabwe.
no it is like that because in zim/ we speak two languges shona and ndebele so in shona we dont have''x''
kanjani = Hi there!in Shona language because approximately 85% of the population in Zimbabwe is Shona speaking and speaks Shona as their first language.For more information on the Shona Language, see related links.
about 9 million are Shona, also the Ndebele in the south west and the Shangane of the south east