No. The official language of Zimbabwe are English, although Shona and Ndebele are very widely spoken and actually officially recognized languages.
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 capital of Botswana is Gaborone, not Harare. Harare is the capital of Zimbabwe. Oh I know. Botswana has 1,560,000 population, and Zimbabwe has 12,671,000. Here are the languages in Botswana: English and Setswana. and Zimbabwe: English (official), Shona, Ndebele, and other languages. and the currency for Botswana is pula. and Zimbabwe, Zimbabwean Dollar. Botswana is between Namibia, Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe is south in South Africa.
The Latin alphabet is used for all official languages of Zimbabwe, including Shona, Ndebele and English.
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
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
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 20 languages spoken in Zimbabwe: Dombe English Fanagalo Kalanga Kunda Lozi Manyika Nambya Ndau Ndebele Nsenga Nyanja Shona Tonga Tsoa Tsonga Tswa Tswana Venda Zimbabwe Sign Language
Dog is "imbwa" in shona- one of the national languages of Zimbabwe.
No, "makadini" is not a standard greeting in Zimbabwe. In Shona, one of the main languages spoken there, "makadini" translates to "how are you?" The common way to say hello is "mhoro" or "hello" in English, which is widely used due to the country's diverse languages and cultures.
There are many sports in Zimbabwe. Soccer is particularly popular.
There are 10 cities in Zimbabwe.
Shona: Mhoro Ndebele: Sawubona English: Hello