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  2. Swahili language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swahili_language

    In Kenya, Kiswahili has been the national language since 1964 and is official since 2010. [47] Chama cha Kiswahili cha Taifa (CHAKITA) was established in 1998 to research and promote Kiswahili language in Kenya. [48] Kiswahili is a compulsory subject in all Kenyan primary and secondary schools. [49]

  3. Standard Swahili language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Swahili_language

    Standard Swahili language arose during the colonial era as the homogenised version of the dominant dialects of the Swahili language.. Standard Swahili enabled communication in a wide array of situations: it facilitated political cooperation between anti-apartheid fighters from South Africa and their Tanzanian military instructors and continues to give members of the African American community ...

  4. Mathias E. Mnyampala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathias_E._Mnyampala

    He died on 8 June 1969 in Dodoma city, Tanzania. Mnyampala wrote in Swahili, the lingua franca of East Africa, not Cigogo, the native language of his ethnic group. Mnyampala wrote more than 25 books. [4] Among them was Historia, mila, na desturi za Wagogo, a history of the Gogo people commissioned by the British colonial government. [5]

  5. Johann Ludwig Krapf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Ludwig_Krapf

    Linguists have been drawing on his works as he studied languages as diverse as Ge'ez, Amharic, Oromo, Swahili, Kamba, Mijikenda and Maasai language. His house at New Rabai is now part of Rabai Museum, one of the National Museums of Kenya. The building of the German Embassy at Nairobi is called "Ludwig-Krapf-House".

  6. Languages of Tanzania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Tanzania

    The Bantu Swahili language written in the Arabic script on the clothes of a Tanzanian woman (early 1900s). According to Ethnologue, there are a total of 126 languages spoken in Tanzania. Two are institutional, 18 are developing, 58 are vigorous, 40 are endangered, and 8 are dying. There are also three languages that recently became extinct. [2]

  7. Swahilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swahilization

    Swahilization or Swahilisation refers to one of two practices: . the cultural assimilation of local peoples in Southeast Africa into the Swahili people and their culture.; the post-independence promotion of the Swahili language by the governments of Southeast African former colonies as a national and official language, alongside a greater cultural assimilation policy of Africanization (see ...

  8. Languages of Kenya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Kenya

    The two official languages of Kenya, Swahili and English, are widely spoken as lingua francas; however, including second-language speakers, Swahili is more widely spoken than English. [1] Swahili is a Bantu language native to East Africa and English is inherited from British colonial rule .

  9. Jan Knappert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Knappert

    In addition to the study of Swahili, Dr Knappert also holds a degree in Sanskrit with Indian history, Hinduism and Buddhism, a degree in Semitic languages with Hebrew, Arabic and Islam, and a Master in Austronesian studies, with Malay, Tagalog, Hawaiian and Malagasy. After teaching at SOAS for a number of years, he moved to Belgium to lecture.