Unaelekea wapi?....Unaenda wapi? .....where are you going? Uko aje? ....How are you? Niko salama, niko mzuri, niko mzima..... I am fine Jina langu ni Beloved...............My name is Beloved Jina lako ni?................Your name is? Leo nitatembea mjini.........Today I will roam in town. Ningetaka kununua vitu............I would like to buy things. Ninaenda nyumbani............I am going home. Nyumbani ni wapi?...............Where is home? Nyumbani ni Kaloleni..............Home is in Kaloleni (for example) Mia moja...............100 Mia mbili.................200 etc. elfu moja ..............1000 Tunaweza kuwa marafiki...........Can we be friends.
Msichana = Girl Mvulana = Boy Kijana = Youngster/ Teenager / Youth Swahili started in the coastal region. It span from the Kenyan coastline to Tanzanian and parts of Mozambique. Maybe next time you can write the words on the screen for your viewers.
@@belovedayomi1Unfortunately I live out of the country. I don't know any personally. I am actually learning the latest from Kenya through folks like you. Quite a few of them on social media platforms, you shouldn't have any problem finding one
I used to teach Swahili to Expats living in Kenya before Niomoke. Let me know if you wanna throw some Naira away so I can teach you quick Swahili lessons . 😂
You should consider writing them down and practice. Note every new word/phrase you learn. She tried but as she said she isn't a really good teacher. Find a better person to teach you. The difference between Kenya/Tanzania is almost like British English vs American English. Eg. Kenyans might say "Pesa" while Tanzanians mights say "Hela" but they all refer to the same thing "Money". Swahili started at the coastal area (Indian Ocean) of both Kenya and Tanzania down to some parts of Mozambique that's where the wa-Swahili people reside. So let nobody tell you it started from a specific country. It later spread inland. So if you travel to the coast, say Mombasa or Zanzibar you'll notice their Swahili is more pure cause that's where it evolved from. Sheng is mainly spoken by Nairobians. It's a mixture of Swahili, English and other tribe languages like Kikuyu,Luo etc Swahili- " unakuja lini?" Sheng- "una-come lini?" They both mean " when are you coming" So if you notice in sheng they replace "kuja" which is Swahili with the English word "come". You understand.
But you are good because you andstrand swahili
Lol… am trying to learn now
Unaelekea wapi?....Unaenda wapi? .....where are you going?
Uko aje? ....How are you?
Niko salama, niko mzuri, niko mzima..... I am fine
Jina langu ni Beloved...............My name is Beloved
Jina lako ni?................Your name is?
Leo nitatembea mjini.........Today I will roam in town.
Ningetaka kununua vitu............I would like to buy things.
Ninaenda nyumbani............I am going home.
Nyumbani ni wapi?...............Where is home?
Nyumbani ni Kaloleni..............Home is in Kaloleni (for example)
Mia moja...............100
Mia mbili.................200 etc.
elfu moja ..............1000
Tunaweza kuwa marafiki...........Can we be friends.
Ndio we can be friends
Thank you very much
I have learnt
🙏🏻🙏🏻
Swahili is hard to learn…. Common French self I still don’t know
Hehehe its a good idea to learn some Swahili. Just learn 5 words per day and in 1 month you will have enough to move around
Yeah exactly that’s what I want to do now…. From there pole pole I will be a little fluent
Asanti for commenting
Greetings in basic kiswahili is Hujambo , Habari yako
You will respond by saying Sijambo or Mzuri sana.
Uko aje and poa are sheng respectively.
Asanti sana
Habariyako bea
@@belovedayomi1 Mzuri sana @Beloved Ayomi
I like how you are struggling to learn swahili ...i will personally start speaking to you in swahili only.
I recommend Duolingo app though.😂
Okay i wil also want to interact with people in swahili...
okay i will try it out
Asanti sana
Sheng is slang
Yh 👍 it’s slang not a language
Msichana = Girl
Mvulana = Boy
Kijana = Youngster/ Teenager / Youth
Swahili started in the coastal region. It span from the Kenyan coastline to Tanzanian and parts of Mozambique.
Maybe next time you can write the words on the screen for your viewers.
Thank you very much for translating
That what I would do next
So sorry
Thanks for the comment 🙏🏻
Swahili is not hard if you try writing the words on paper. It’s even easier than English.
That’s what I am supposed to do my mind forgot
Thank you 🙏🏻
A very beautiful lady. But she is right, she won't make a good teacher. Very shy. You should get in touch with a Kenyan u-tuber
yes ooo. she really tried..pls recommend me one
@@belovedayomi1Unfortunately I live out of the country. I don't know any personally. I am actually learning the latest from Kenya through folks like you. Quite a few of them on social media platforms, you shouldn't have any problem finding one
yeah i will try my best to give premium content... thank you
Atleast you know some basic words.if you are determined you'll learn more
yes i will learn polepole
I used to teach Swahili to Expats living in Kenya before Niomoke. Let me know if you wanna throw some Naira away so I can teach you quick Swahili lessons . 😂
Ok I will some away to learn… lol 😆
Thanks for the comment
You should consider writing them down and practice. Note every new word/phrase you learn. She tried but as she said she isn't a really good teacher. Find a better person to teach you.
The difference between Kenya/Tanzania is almost like British English vs American English.
Eg. Kenyans might say "Pesa" while Tanzanians mights say "Hela" but they all refer to the same thing "Money".
Swahili started at the coastal area (Indian Ocean) of both Kenya and Tanzania down to some parts of Mozambique that's where the wa-Swahili people reside. So let nobody tell you it started from a specific country. It later spread inland. So if you travel to the coast, say Mombasa or Zanzibar you'll notice their Swahili is more pure cause that's where it evolved from.
Sheng is mainly spoken by Nairobians. It's a mixture of Swahili, English and other tribe languages like Kikuyu,Luo etc
Swahili- " unakuja lini?"
Sheng- "una-come lini?"
They both mean " when are you coming"
So if you notice in sheng they replace "kuja" which is Swahili with the English word "come". You understand.
Ohhh wow I got all the details
Thank you very much
She is not oo 😂
Asanteni sana
Poa ni sheng
Okay 👍
Thanks for your comment
poa means cooled or chilled, as in maji imepoa, the water has cooled.
I can teach you for FREEE including sheng, at least next time pick someone diverse and active not to sound disrespectful to the lady
Okay thank you
get a professional teacher to teach you, your guest is a sheng speaker.
Lol… okay I have heard am learning pole pole