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Language Learning: Swahili

A resources guide for KiSwahili learners.

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Library Hours

The lending collection is located in the Mugar Memorial Libary stacks and is available during Mugar’s hours.

To request an out of hours appointment please contact Beth Restrick.

Regular Hours

Monday – Friday

9am – 5pm

Saturday & Sunday

 Closed

Library will be closed during Holidays except veteran's Day.

Study Period Extended Hours

Please Note:  In the event of a BU weather emergency closing, the African Studies Library will be closed.

About This Guide

 

This library guide is primarily intended for KiSwahili learners at Boston University and contain information on library materials, Internet & community resources useful for learning and practicing KiSwahili.

Culture & History...

Swahili language, also called kiSwahili, or Kiswahili, is a Bantu language spoken either as a mother tongue or as a fluent second language on the east coast of Africa in an area extending from Lamu Island, Kenya, in the north to the southern border of Tanzania in the south.

Swahili spread along the east African coast by means of the Arab slave trade. The origin of the language lies with a Swahili ethnic group that lived along the coastand engaged in its own maritime trade prior to taking up willing commerce with the Arabs.
Arab traders, known to have had extensive contact with the coastal peoples from at least the 6th century C.E., later influenced the spread of Islam along the East African coast from at least the 9th century. There is also cultural evidence of early Persian (or Arabo-Persian) settlement on Zanzibar from Shiraz in present day Iran.

People who speak Swahili as their sole mother tongue are usually referred to as Waswahili, but this name refers to their language only and do

es not denote any particular ethnic or tribal unit. Swahili is widely used as a lingua franca in: (1) Tanzania, where it is the language of administration and primary education; (2) Kenya, where it is, after English, the main language for these purposes; (3) Congo (Kinshasa), where a form of Swahili is one of the four languages of administration, the main language for this purpose being French; and (4) Uganda, where the main language is again English.

The total number of Swahili speakers exceeds 120 million. It serves as a national, or official language, of four nations: Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is spoken in numerous others.

Swahili has vocabulary derived from Arabic through more than twelve centuries of contact with Arabic speaking inhabitants of the coast of eastern Africa. It has also incorporated Persian, German, Portuguese, English, and French words into its vocabulary through
contact during the past five centuries.

There are about 15 main Swahili dialects, as well as several pidgin forms in use. The three most important dialects are kiUnguja (or Kiunguja), spoken on Zanzibar and in the mainland areas of Tanzania; kiMvita (or Kimvita), spoken in Mombasa and other areas of Kenya; and kiAmu (or Kiamu), spoken on the island of Lamu and adjoining parts of the coast. Standard Swahili is based on the kiUnguja dialect.Swahili is characteristically Bantu in its grammar and it has a large vocabulary of word roots traceable to a common Bantu stock. For more on Swahili culture & history consult the following books:

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