Swahili
Language
The Swahili language is an East African
language of Bantu origin. It is the native tongue of the
Swahili people who reside along the East African coast from
Somalia to Mozambique. It is spoken by more than 35 million
people worldwide, with approximately 5 million people using at
their first language. Swahili is the official language of
Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda, though it is also spoken Rwanda,
Congo, Somalia, and Mozambique. The Swahili language shows a
great Middle Eastern influence, and the history of the people
reflects that.
Once believed to be direct descendants of
Persian settlers, the ancient group of Swahili is now
acknowledged as native Bantu peoples who were able to maintain
interactions with the Persian explorers around the 7th and 8th
centuries AD. The Swahili were a distinctive group that
eventually lost its independence to the Portuguese in the 15th
century. The Arabs eventually dislodged the Portuguese from
power, and overtook the Swahili in the late 16th century. By
the 19th century, the slave trade was prominent in the regions.
At the beginning of the 20th century, Britain and Germany
helped to lay the groundwork of the modern territories of the
Swahili peoples.
The Swahili language is a member of the
Saloki group of the Northeastern coast Bantu languages. The
Bantu languages are a family of languages that in turn belong
to the Niger-Congo language group. Structurally, the Swahili
language is faithfully a Bantu tongue. It shares more cultural
and linguistic ties with the Bantu languages and peoples than
it does with any other languages of groups that came into
contact with the Swahili people. However, in modern times, the
influence of these other cultural groups over Swahili is
apparent. For example, there are many borrowed words from
Arabic due to the usage of the Koran by the Swahili people for
spiritual reference. There are also borrowed terms from
Portuguese, Persian, English, and German in the modern Swahili
vernacular.
The speakers of the Swahili language refer
to the language as Kiswahili. The word Swahili comes from the
plural form of the word Sahel, which is Sawahil, Arabic for
"coast". The first Swahili texts appear in the Arabic alphabet.
In fact, the earliest known document in Swahili was a poetic
epic, published in 1728 in the Arabic script. Since the
occupation of the European colonists, though, the Latin
alphabet has replaced the Arabic alphabet in use for the
Swahili language.
The structure of the Swahili language is
comparable to several other Bantu languages, and includes a
noun class exclusively for humans. Swahili arranges its nouns
into 14 classes. These 14 noun classes include 6 classes for
singular nouns, 6 classes for plural nouns, 1 class for
infinitives, and 1 class entirely for the noun mahali, or
"place". This noun class system is based on the research of
German linguist Carl Meinhof, who was renowned for his studies
of African languages. The Swahili language employs its verbs to
express several different points, including plurality, tense,
and even conjunction clauses (and, but, or, etc.) by combining
a root word with different prefixes or suffixes.
In Eastern Africa today, there are over 15
distinct dialects of the Swahili language. However, Kiunguja,
the Zanzibar dialect is the center of standard modern Swahili.
There is one dialect, however, that is gaining distinction
among the more cosmopolitan people of the region. The use of
the Sheng dialect, which is a sort of slang, has become
popular. Its origins are in the slums of Nairobi, but it is now
considered chic to use in informal conversation among some of
the population.
The Swahili language is the official
language of the ancient Swahili people. Through occupation by
other cultures, the Swahili have seen a great deal of influence
come over their culture, especially over their native tongue.
In our own English-speaking culture, however, we see some
influence from the Swahili as well. For example, the term
"Kwanzaa" is a Swahili word meaning "first" or "beginning", and
is the name of a popular African American holiday celebration.
In addition, the word safari, a term used around the world, is
of Swahili origin. The influence of the Swahili language
bridges the oceans and continents.
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