1041F0768A58A87822CBE385B4379E68 learn swahili in dodomaKILELE SWAHILI LANGUAGE Treat: COMMON SWAHILI -DON’T & WARNING –SIGNS

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Swahili as a Second Language @ (KSLT)

Day, Evening and Saturday Programs

If learning Swahili in Dodoma. is your goal, you have come to the right place! We offer a wide variety of Swahili programs ranging from our intensive day program with 25 hours per week and 12 different levels to customized private lessons with your own private Swahili tutor. KSLT has become known for its excellent teaching and friendly atmosphere and is committed to providing quality language instruction as well as the help, services, and support our students need to study the language.

IN WORDS OF OUR CLIENTS

Thursday, April 13, 2017

COMMON SWAHILI -DON’T & WARNING –SIGNS



Find the Swahili Public Area Signs you need amongst our wide range of selected Information Signs


Usiingie hapa
Do not enter here
Usipite hapa
Do not pass here
Usitupe taka ovyo
Do not liter
Usipige picha
Do not take pictures
Zima simu
Switch off you phone
Usikae hapa
Do not seat here
Mlango wa dharula
Emergency door
Usikojoe hapa
Do not urinate here
Muarufuku
Prohibited
Marufuku kukaa hapa
Prohibited to seat here
Pita kulia
Pass on the right side
Pita kushoto
Pass on the left side
Marufuku kufanya biashara hapa.
Prohibited to do business here.
Wazi
Open
Upo wazi
It is open
Vyumba vipo
Nafasi ipo
Room are available
Vyumba vimejaa
Vyumba vimeisha
No rooms
Hakuna njia
No way
Njia imefungwa
Barabara imefungwa
Way is closed
Road is closed
Usipige kelele
Do not make noise
Hatari
Danger
Usivute sigara
No smoking

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ABOUT SWAHILI

Swahili is traditionally regarded as being the language of coastal areas of Tanzania and Kenya, formalised after independence by presidents of the African Great Lakes region. It was first spoken by natives of the coastal mainland and spread as a fisherman's language to the various islands surrounding the Swahili Coast. Traders from these islands had extensive contact with the coastal peoples from at least the 2nd century A.D. and Swahili began to spread along the Swahili Coast from at least the 6th century. There is also cultural evidence of early Zaramo people settlement on Zanzibar from Dar-es-salaam in present-day Tanzania. The African population of the island holds the tradition that it is descended from these early settlers

NOW it is the most widely spoken African language in the world, with over 50 million speakers. It is used as a lingua franca or trade language by many people in Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, southern Somalia and northern coastal Mozambique. A version of Kiswahili is spoken as a first language by several million people in the eastern part of D.R. Congo. Most people in Kenya today speak at least some Kiswahili, and throughout Tanzania it is fast replacing local tongues as the first language of the new generation of children. If you plan to live, work, or travel in any of these areas, some knowledge of Kiswahili will help you communicate the way you want to.