Swahili, also known as Kiswahili, is a Bantu language of the Niger–Congo language family, originally spoken by the Swahili people, who are found primarily in Tanzania, Kenya, and Mozambique (along the East African coast and adjacent littoral islands). Estimates of the number of Swahili speakers, including both native and second-language speakers, generally range from 150 million to 200 million. and Kenya.
About 40% of Swahili vocabulary consists of Arabic loanwords, including the name of the language ( , a plural adjectival form of an Arabic word meaning 'of the coasts'). Swahili also has a significant number of loanwords from Portuguese, English and German. The Arabic loanwords date from the era of contact between Arab slave traders and the Bantu inhabitants of the east coast of Africa, which was also the time period when Swahili emerged as a lingua franca in the region.
Due to concerted efforts by the governments of Tanzania and Kenya, Swahili is one of three official languages (alongside English and French) of the East African Community (EAC) countries, which are Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Rwanda, Somalia, South Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda. It is the lingua franca of other areas in the African Great Lakes region and East and Southern Africa. Swahili is also one of the working languages of the African Union and of the Southern African Development Community. The East African Community created an institution called the East African Kiswahili Commission (EAKC) which began operations in 2015. The institution currently serves as the leading body for promoting the language in the East African region, as well as for coordinating its development and usage for regional integration and sustainable development. In recent years Somalia, South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, Ethiopia, and South Sudan have begun offering Swahili as a subject in schools or have developed plans to do so.
Shikomor (or Comorian), an official language in Comoros that is also spoken in Mayotte (Shimaore), is closely related to Swahili and is sometimes considered a dialect of Swahili, although other authorities consider it a distinct language. In 2022, based on Swahili's growth as a prominent international language, the United Nations declared Swahili Language Day as 7 July to commemorate the date that Julius Nyerere adopted Swahili as a unifying language for Tanganyikan independence struggles.
Classification
Swahili is a Bantu language of the Sabaki branch. In Guthrie's geographic classification, Swahili is in Bantu zone G, whereas the other Sabaki languages are in zone E70, commonly under the name Nyika. Historical linguists consider the Arabic influence on Swahili to be significant, since about 40% of its vocabulary is taken directly from Arabic, and it was initially spoken along the East African coast.
History
thumb|upright|Swahili in Arabic script—memorial plate at the [[Askari Monument, Dar es Salaam (1927)]]
Etymology
The word "Swahili" comes from an Arabic name for the area, meaning "coasts":
{|
|-
| || → || || → ||
|-
| || || || ||
|-
|"coast" || || "coasts" (broken plural) || || "coastal" or "coastal inhabitant"
|}
Origin
The core of the Swahili language originates in Bantu languages of the coast of East Africa. Much of Swahili's Bantu vocabulary has cognates in the Unguja, Pemba, and Mijikenda languages and, to a lesser extent, other East African Bantu languages. While opinions vary on the specifics, it has been historically purported that about 16–20% of the Swahili vocabulary is derived from loan words, the vast majority Arabic, but also other contributing languages, including Persian, Hindustani, Portuguese, and Malay. The South Cushitic languages preceded the Bantu languages in today's Tanzania and Kenya, and have left many loanwords in Bantu languages in the interior of the countries, but they had very little direct impact on Swahili or the other Sabaki languages spoken on the coast.
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Source languages for loanwords in Swahili
! Source languages !! Percentage
|-
| Arabic (mainly Omani Arabic) || 40%
|-
| English || 4.6%
|-
| Portuguese|| 0.9–1.0%
|-
| Hindustani || 0.7–3.9%
|-
| Persian (mainly Iranian Persian) || 0.4–3.4%
|-
| Malagasy || 0.2–0.4%
|}
Omani Arabic is the source of most Arabic loanwords in Swahili. In the text "Early Swahili History Reconsidered", however, Thomas Spear noted that Swahili retains a large amount of grammar, vocabulary, and sounds inherited from the Sabaki language. In fact, while taking account of daily vocabulary, using lists of one hundred words, 72–91% were inherited from the Sabaki language (which is reported as a parent language) whereas 4–17% were loan words from other African languages. Only 2–8% were from non-African languages, and Arabic loan words constituted a fraction of that. According to other sources, about 40% of the Swahili vocabulary comes from Arabic. What also remained unconsidered was that a good number of the borrowed terms had Bantu equivalents. The preferred use of Arabic loan words is prevalent along the coast, where local people, in a cultural show of proximity to, or descent from, Arab culture, would rather use loan words, whereas the people in the interior tend to use the Bantu equivalents. It was originally written in Arabic script.
The earliest known documents written in Swahili are letters written in Kilwa, Tanzania, in 1711 in the Arabic script that were sent to the Portuguese of Mozambique and their local allies. The original letters are preserved in the Historical Archives of Goa, India.
Colonial period
thumb|upright|Although originally written with the Arabic script, Swahili is now written in a [[Latin script|Latin alphabet introduced by Christian missionaries and colonial administrators. The text shown here is the Catholic version of the Lord's Prayer.]]
Various colonial powers that ruled on the coast of East Africa played a role in the growth and spread of Swahili. With the arrival of the Arabs in East Africa, they used Swahili as a language of trade as well as for teaching Islam to the local Bantu peoples. This resulted in Swahili first being written in the Arabic script. The later contact with the Portuguese resulted in the increase of vocabulary of the Swahili language. The language was formalised in an institutional level when the Germans took over after the Berlin Conference. After seeing there was already a widespread language, the Germans formalised it as the official language to be used in schools. Thus schools in Swahili are called Shule (from German ) in government, trade and the court system. With the Germans controlling the major Swahili-speaking region in East Africa, they changed the alphabet system from Arabic to Latin. After the First World War, Britain took over German East Africa, where they found Swahili rooted in most areas, not just the coastal regions. The British decided to formalise it as the language to be used across the East African region (although in British East Africa [Kenya and Uganda] most areas used English and various Nilotic and other Bantu languages while Swahili was mostly restricted to the coast). In June 1928, an inter-territorial conference attended by representatives of Kenya, Tanganyika, Uganda, and Zanzibar took place in Mombasa. The Zanzibar dialect was chosen as standard Swahili for those areas, and the standard orthography for Swahili was adopted.
Current status
Overview
Estimates of the total number of first- and second-language Swahili speakers vary widely, from as low as 50 million to as high as 200 million, but generally range from 60 million to 150 million.
Swahili has become a second language spoken by tens of millions of people in the five African Great Lakes countries (Kenya, DR Congo, Rwanda, Uganda, and Tanzania), where it is an official or national language. It is also the first language for many people in Tanzania, especially in the coastal regions of Tanga, Pwani, Dar es Salaam, Mtwara and Lindi. In the inner regions of Tanzania, Swahili is spoken with an accent influenced by other local languages and dialects. There, it is a first language for most of the people who are born in the cities, whilst being spoken as a second language in rural areas. Swahili and closely related languages are spoken by relatively small numbers of people in Burundi, Comoros, Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia and Rwanda. The language was still understood in the southern ports of the Red Sea in the 20th century. The East African Community created an institution called the East African Kiswahili Commission (EAKC) which began operations in 2015. The institution currently serves as the leading body for promoting the language in the East African region, as well as for coordinating its development and usage for regional integration and sustainable development. part-of-speech tagging, language learning software, an electronic dictionary,
thumb|402x402px|Swahili in East Africa
Tanzania
The widespread use of Swahili as a national language in Tanzania came after Tanganyika gained independence in 1961 and the government decided that it would be used as a language to unify the new nation. This saw the use of Swahili in all levels of government, trade, art as well as schools in which primary school children are taught in Swahili, before switching to English (medium of instruction) in secondary schools (although Swahili is still taught as an independent subject). After Tanganyika and Zanzibar unification in 1964, Taasisi ya Uchunguzi wa Kiswahili (TUKI, Institute of Swahili Research) was created from the Interterritorial Language Committee. In 1970 TUKI was merged with the University of Dar es Salaam, while Baraza la Kiswahili la Taifa (BAKITA) was formed. BAKITA is an organisation dedicated to the development and advocacy of Swahili as a means of national integration in Tanzania. Key activities mandated for the organisation include creating a healthy atmosphere for the development of Swahili, encouraging use of the language in government and business functions, coordinating activities of other organisations involved with Swahili, standardising the language. BAKITA vision are: "1.To efficiently manage and coordinate the development and use of Kiswahili in Tanzania 2.To participate fully and effectively in promoting Swahili in East Africa, Africa and the entire world over". Although other bodies and agencies can propose new vocabularies, BAKITA is the only organisation that can approve its usage in the Swahili language. Tanzanians are highly credited for shaping the language to appear the way it is now.
Kenya
In Kenya, Swahili (or Kiswahili as it is referred to in the Constitution and by the Kenya Law Reform Society ) has been the national language since 1964 and is official since 2010. Chama cha Kiswahili cha Taifa (CHAKITA) was established in 1998 to research and promote Kiswahili language in Kenya. Kiswahili is a compulsory subject in all Kenyan primary and secondary schools.
Congo
Swahili is recognized as a national language in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and is widely spoken in the eastern regions. The local dialects of Swahili in Congo are known as Congo Swahili and differ considerably from Standard Swahili.
Burundi
In order to strengthen political ties with other East African Community nations, both Kiswahili and English have been taught in Burundian elementary schools since the academic year 2005/2006. Kiswahili is now used widely in Burundi but is not recognised as an official language; only French, Kirundi, and English have this distinction. Since 2013, Swahili has been included in the all Burundian education system.
Uganda
Uganda adopted Kiswahili as one of its official languages (alongside English) in 2022, and also made it compulsory across primary and secondary schools in the country. The Swahili language is not widespread in Somalia and has no official status nationally or regionally. Standard Swahili is generally only spoken by Somali nationals who have resided in Kenya and subsequently returned to Somalia. A closely related language Mushunguli (also known as Zigula, Zigua, or Chizigua) is spoken by some of the Somali Bantu ethnic minority mostly living in the Jubba Valley. It is classified as a Northeast Coast Bantu language as Swahili is and has some intelligibility with Swahili.
In 2024, Somalia joined the East African Community and its inclusion may facilitate the spread of the Swahili language in Somalia. Nevertheless, in Somalia, Swahili, as a foreign language, will have to compete with English, the primary global lingua franca, and Arabic, the official second language of Somalia and a liturgical language for Muslims,
With the arrival of Europeans in East Africa, Christianity was introduced to the region, profoundly shaping the development of Swahili. While Arab influence remained concentrated along the coastal areas, European missionaries ventured further inland, establishing missions and promoting Christian teachings. Early outposts were located along the coast, where they encountered Swahili as a widely spoken lingua franca. Recognizing its utility and structural similarities to other indigenous languages, the Europeans adopted Swahili as a medium for evangelization, religious and general educational instruction, and, eventually, colonization.
Politics
During the struggle for Tanganyika independence, the Tanganyika African National Union used Swahili as a language of mass organisation and political movement. This included publishing pamphlets and radio broadcasts to rally the people to fight for independence. After gaining independence, Swahili was adopted as the national language. To this day, Tanzanians carry a sense of pride when it comes to Swahili, especially when it is used to unite over 120 tribes across Tanzania. Swahili was used to strengthen solidarity within the nation, and remains to be a key identity of the Tanzanian people.
Phonology
thumb|Example of spoken Swahili
Vowels
Standard Swahili has five vowel phonemes: , , , , and . According to Ellen Contini-Morava, vowels are never reduced, regardless of stress. However, according to Edgar Polomé, these five phonemes can vary in pronunciation. Polomé claims that , , , and are pronounced as such only in stressed syllables. In unstressed syllables, as well as before a prenasalized consonant, they are pronounced as , , , and . E is also commonly pronounced as mid-position after w. Polomé claims that is pronounced as such only after w and is pronounced as in other situations, especially after (y). A can be pronounced as in word-final position. Long vowels in Swahili are written as doubled vowels (for example, , "sheep") due to a historical process in which became elided between the second last and last vowels of a word (for example, , "sheep" was originally kondolo, which survives in certain dialects). As a consequence, long vowels are not considered phonemic. A similar process exists in Zulu.
Consonants
{| class="wikitable" style="margin: 0 auto; text-align:center"
|+Swahili consonant phonemes
|-
! colspan=2 |
! Labial
! Dental
! Alveolar
! Postalveolar<br/>/ Palatal
! Velar
! Glottal
|-
! colspan=2 | Nasal
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
! rowspan=4 | Stop
! prenasalized
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
! implosive<br/>/ voiced
| ~
|
| ~
| ~
| ~
|
|-
! voiceless
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
! aspirated
| ( )
|
| ( )
| ( )
| ( )
|
|-
! rowspan=3 | Fricative
! prenasalized
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
! voiced
|
| ( )
|
|
| ( )
|
|-
! voiceless
|
| ( )
|
|
| ( )
|
|-
! colspan=2 | Approximant
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
! colspan=2 | Rhotic
|
|
|
|
|
|
|}
Where not shown, the orthography is the same as IPA.
Some dialects of Swahili may also have the aspirated phonemes though they are unmarked in Swahili's orthography. Multiple studies favour classifying prenasalization as consonant clusters, not as separate phonemes. Historically, nasalization has been lost before voiceless consonants, and subsequently the voiced consonants have devoiced, though they are still written mb, nd etc. The phoneme is realised as either a short trill or more commonly as a single tap by most speakers. exists in free variation with h, and is only distinguished by some speakers. c is not used apart from the digraph ch, unassimilated English loans and, occasionally, as a substitute for k in advertisements. There are also several digraphs for Arabic sounds, which many speakers outside of ethnic Swahili areas have trouble differentiating.
The language used to be primarily written in the Ajami script, which is an Arabic script. Much literature was produced in this script. With the introduction of Latin, the use of Ajami script has been diminished significantly. However, the language continues to have a tradition of being written in Arabic script. However, the spread of a standardized indigenous variation of Arabic script for Swahili was hampered by the colonial takeover of East Africa by the United Kingdom and Germany. The usage of Arabic script was suppressed in German East Africa and to a lesser extent in British East Africa. Nevertheless, well into the 1930s and 1940s, rural literacy rate in Arabic script as well as a local preference to write Swahili in the Arabic script (an unmodified version as opposed to proposals such as that of Mwalimu Sikujua) was relatively high.
Another class with broad semantic extension is the m-/mi- class (Bantu classes 3/4). This is often called the 'tree' class, because mti, miti "tree(s)" is the prototypical example. However, it seems to cover vital entities neither human nor typical animals: trees and other plants, such as mwitu 'forest' and mtama 'millet' (and from there, things made from plants, like mkeka 'mat'); supernatural and natural forces, such as mwezi 'moon', mlima 'mountain', mto 'river'; active things, such as moto 'fire', including active body parts (moyo 'heart', mkono 'hand, arm'); and human groups, which are vital but not themselves human, such as mji 'village', and, by analogy, mzinga 'beehive/cannon'. From the central idea of tree, which is thin, tall, and spreading, comes an extension to other long or extended things or parts of things, such as mwavuli 'umbrella', moshi 'smoke', msumari 'nail'; and from activity there even come active instantiations of verbs, such as mfuo "metal forging", from -fua "to forge", or mlio "a sound", from -lia "to make a sound". Words may be connected to their class by more than one metaphor. For example, mkono is an active body part, and mto is an active natural force, but they are also both long and thin. Things with a trajectory, such as mpaka 'border' and mwendo 'journey', are classified with long thin things, as in many other languages with noun classes. This may be further extended to anything dealing with time, such as mwaka 'year' and perhaps mshahara 'wages'. Animals exceptional in some way and so not easily fitting in the other classes may be placed in this class.
The other classes have foundations that may at first seem similarly counterintuitive. In short,
- Classes 1–2 include most words for people: kin terms, professions, ethnicities, etc., including translations of most English words ending in -er. They include a couple of generic words for animals: mnyama 'beast', mdudu 'bug'.
- Classes 5–6 have a broad semantic range of groups, expanses, and augmentatives. Although interrelated, it is easier to illustrate if broken down:
- Augmentatives, such as joka 'serpent' from nyoka 'snake', lead to titles and other terms of respect (the opposite of diminutives, which lead to terms of contempt): Bwana 'Sir', shangazi 'aunt', fundi 'craftsman', kadhi 'judge'
- Expanses: ziwa 'lake', bonde 'valley', taifa 'country', anga 'sky'
- from this, mass nouns: maji 'water', vumbi 'dust' (and other liquids and fine particulates that may cover broad expanses), kaa 'charcoal', mali 'wealth', maridhawa 'abundance'
- Collectives: kundi 'group', kabila 'language/ethnic group', jeshi 'army', daraja ' stairs', manyoya 'fur, feathers', mapesa 'small change', manyasi 'weeds', jongoo 'millipede' (large set of legs), marimba 'xylophone' (large set of keys)
- from this, individual things found in groups: jiwe 'stone', tawi 'branch', ua 'flower', tunda 'fruit' (also the names of most fruits), yai 'egg', mapacha 'twins', jino 'tooth', tumbo 'stomach' (cf. English "guts"), and paired body parts such as jicho 'eye', bawa 'wing', etc.
- also collective or dialogic actions, which occur among groups of people: neno 'a word', from kunena 'to speak' (and by extension, mental verbal processes: wazo 'thought', maana 'meaning'); pigo 'a stroke, blow', from kupiga 'to hit'; gomvi 'a quarrel', shauri 'advice, plan', kosa 'mistake', jambo 'affair', penzi 'love', jibu 'answer', agano 'promise', malipo 'payment'
- From pairing, reproduction is suggested as another extension (fruit, egg, testicle, flower, twins, etc.), but these generally duplicate one or more of the subcategories above
- Classes 9–10 are used for most typical animals: ndege 'bird', samaki 'fish', and the specific names of typical beasts, birds, and bugs. However, this is the 'other' class, for words not fitting well elsewhere, and about half of the class 9–10 nouns are foreign loanwords. Loans may be classified as 9–10 because they lack the prefixes inherent in other classes, and most native class 9–10 nouns have no prefix. Thus they do not form a coherent semantic class, though there are still semantic extensions from individual words.
- Class 11 (which takes class 10 for the plural) are mostly nouns with an "extended outline shape", in either one dimension or two:
- mass nouns that are generally localized rather than covering vast expanses: uji 'porridge', wali 'cooked rice'
- broad: ukuta 'wall', ukucha 'fingernail', upande 'side' (≈ ubavu 'rib'), wavu 'net', wayo 'sole, footprint', ua 'fence, yard', uteo 'winnowing basket'
- long: utambi 'wick', utepe 'stripe', uta 'bow', ubavu 'rib', ufa 'crack', unywele 'a hair'
- from 'a hair', singulatives of nouns, which are often class 6 ('collectives') in the plural: unyoya 'a feather', uvumbi 'a mote of dust', ushanga 'a bead'.
- Class 14 are abstractions, such as utoto 'childhood' (from mtoto 'a child') and have no plural. They have the same prefixes and concord as class 11, except optionally for adjectival concord.
- Class 15 are verbal infinitives.
- Classes 16–18 are locatives. The Bantu nouns of these classes have been lost; the only permanent member is the Arabic loan mahali 'place(s)', but in Mombasa Swahili, the old prefixes survive: pahali 'place', mwahali 'places'. However, any noun with the locative suffix -ni takes class 16–18 agreement. The distinction between them is that class 16 agreement is used if the location is intended to be definite ("at"), class 17 if indefinite ("around") or involves motion ("to, toward"), and class 18 if it involves containment ("within"): mahali pazuri 'a good spot', mahali kuzuri 'a nice area', mahali muzuri (it's nice in there).
Borrowing
Borrowings may or may not be given a prefix corresponding to the semantic class they fall in. For example, Arabic ("bug, insect") was borrowed as mdudu, plural wadudu, with the class 1/2 prefixes m- and wa-, but Arabic ("fish scales", plural of ) and English sloth were borrowed as simply fulusi ("mahi-mahi" fish) and slothi ("sloth"), with no prefix associated with animals (whether those of class 9/10 or 1/2).
In the process of naturalization of borrowings within Swahili, loanwords are often reinterpreted, or reanalysed, as if they already contain a Swahili class prefix. In such cases the interpreted prefix is changed with the usual rules. Consider the following loanwords from Arabic:
- The Swahili word for "book", kitabu, is borrowed from Arabic kitāb(un) "book" (plural ; from the Arabic root k.t.b. "write"). However, the Swahili plural form of this word ("books") is vitabu, following Bantu grammar in which the ki- of kitabu is reanalysed (reinterpreted) as a nominal class prefix whose plural is vi- (class 7/8). ("Of" is animate wa and inanimate ya, za.)
In Standard Swahili, human subjects and objects of whatever class trigger animacy concord in a-, wa- and m-, wa-, and non-human subjects and objects trigger a variety of gender-concord prefixes.
{| class=wikitable
|+Swahili noun-class concord
|-
!NC!!Semantic<br/>field!!Noun<br/>-C, -V!!Subj.!!Obj.!!-a!!Adjective<br/>-C, -i, -e
|-
! –
| I
| (mimi) || colspan=2| ni- ||
|-
! –
| we
| (sisi) || colspan=2| tu- ||
|-
! –
| thou
| (wewe)
| u- || ku- ||
|-
! –
| you
| (ninyi) || m- || wa- ||
|-
! 1
| person
| m-, mw- || a- || m- || wa || m-, mwi-, mwe-
|-
! 2
| people
| wa-, w- || colspan=2| wa- || wa || wa-, we-, we-
|-
! 3
| tree
| m-, mw- || colspan=2| u- || wa || m-, mwi-, mwe-
|-
! 4
| trees
| mi- || colspan=2| i- || ya || mi-, mi-, mye-
|-
! 5
| group,
| ji-/Ø, j- || colspan=2| li- || la || ji-/Ø, ji-, je-
|-
! 6
| groups,
| ma- || colspan=2| ya- || ya || ma-, me-, me-
|-
! 7
| tool,
| ki-, ch- || colspan=2| ki- || cha || ki-, ki-, che-
|-
! 8
| tools,
| vi-, vy- || colspan=2| vi- || vya || vi-, vi-, vye-
|-
! 9
| rowspan=2|animals, 'other', <br/>loanwords
| rowspan=2| N- || colspan=2| i- || ya || rowspan=2| N-, nyi-, nye-
|-
! 10
| colspan=2| zi- || za
|-
! 11
| 'extension'
| u-, w-/uw- || colspan=2| u- || wa || m-, mwi-, mwe-
|-
! 10
| (plural of 11)|| N- || colspan=2| zi- || za || N-, nyi-, nye-
|-
! 14
| abstraction
| u-, w-/uw- || colspan=2| u- || wa || m-, mwi-, mwe-<br/> or u-, wi-, we-
|-
! 15
| infinitives
| ku-, kw- || colspan=2| ku- || kwa- || ku-, kwi-, kwe-
|-
! 16
| precise position
| -ni, mahali || colspan=2| pa- || pa || pa-, pe-, pe-
|-
! 17
| imprecise position
| -ni || colspan=2| ku- || kwa || ku-, kwi-, kwe-
|-
! 18
| internal position
| -ni || colspan=2| m(u)- || mwa || mu-, mwi-, mwe-
|}
But there are numerous other dialects of Swahili, some of which are mutually unintelligible, such as the following:
Old dialects
Maho (2009) considers these to be distinct languages:
- Kimwani is spoken in the Kerimba Islands and northern coastal Mozambique.
- Chimwiini is spoken by the ethnic minorities in and around the town of Barawa on the southern coast of Somalia.
- Kibajuni is spoken by the Bajuni minority ethnic group on the coast and islands on both sides of the Somali–Kenyan border and in the Bajuni Islands (the northern part of the Lamu archipelago) and is also called Kitikuu and Kigunya.
- Socotra Swahili (extinct)
- Sidi, in Gujarat, India (possibly extinct)
The rest of the dialects are divided by him into two groups:
- Mombasa–Lamu Swahili
- Lamu
- The dialects of the Lamu group (especially Kiamu, Kipate, Kingozi) are the linguistic base of the oldest () Swahili manuscripts and poems that reached us. They are sometimes described as "literary" dialects but they were also used for everyday life and are still spoken today except Kingozi.
- Kiamu is spoken in and around the island of Lamu (Amu) and have an important corpus of classical poems of the 18th and 19th centuries written in Arabic script (Kiajemi).
- Kipate is a local dialect of Pate Island, considered to be closest to the original dialect of Kingozi. It has also an important classical corpus it's and old and "an exclusively literary, arcane dialect". It varies depending on the authors whose will to return to a pure form of the old language make them use Kigunya mainly (Kipate is a subdialect of Kigunya) and secondarily Kiamu and Kimvita. Knappert, on the contrary, states the existence of a literary koine in the 18th century based on the Kingozi as a prestigious and widespread dialect. The 2009 New Updated Guthrie List, a referential classification of the Bantu languages, considers kiOzi as a dialect in itself. It is not the ancestor language of Kiswahili but a member of the Lamu group (code G42a) with Kiamu, Kipate and Kisiu. This brief overview indicates that the state of research is fragmented and uncertain on the history of the kingozi.
- Mombasa
- Chijomvu is a subdialect of the Mombasa area.
- Kimvita is the major dialect of Mombasa (also known as "Mvita", which means "war", in reference to the many wars which were fought over it, the other major dialect alongside Kiunguja. It has an important classical corpus written in Arabic script from the 18st and 19st century.
- Kingare is the subdialect of the Mombasa area.
- Kimrima is spoken around Pangani, Vanga, Dar es Salaam, Rufiji and Mafia Island.
- Kiunguja is spoken in Zanzibar City and environs on Unguja (Zanzibar) Island. Kitumbatu (Pemba) dialects occupy the bulk of the island.
- Mambrui, Malindi
- Chichifundi, a dialect of the southern Kenya coast.
- Chwaka
- Kivumba, a dialect of the southern Kenya coast.
- Nosse Be (Madagascar)
- Pemba Swahili
- Kipemba is a local dialect of the Pemba Island.
- Kitumbatu and Kimakunduchi are the countryside dialects of the island of Zanzibar. Kimakunduchi is a recent renaming of "Kihadimu"; the old name means "serf" and so is considered pejorative.
- Makunduchi
- Mafia, Mbwera
- Kilwa (extinct)
- Kimgao used to be spoken around Kilwa District and to the south.
Maho includes the various Comorian dialects as a third group. Most other authorities consider Comorian to be a Sabaki language, distinct from Swahili.
Other regions
In Somalia, where the Afroasiatic Somali language predominates, a variant of Swahili referred to as Chimwiini (also known as Chimbalazi) is spoken along the Benadir coast by the Bravanese people. Another Swahili dialect known as Kibajuni also serves as the mother tongue of the Bajuni minority ethnic group, which lives in the tiny Bajuni Islands as well as the southern Kismayo region.
In Oman, there are an estimated people who speak Swahili as of 2020. Most are descendants of those repatriated after the fall of the Sultanate of Zanzibar.
Pidgins and creoles
There are Swahili-based slangs, pidgins and creoles:
Swahili poets
- Dada Masiti (c. 1810s – 15 July 1919), Kenyan poet
- Shaaban bin Robert (1909–1962), Tanzanian poet, author, and essayist
- Euphrase Kezilahabi (1944–2020), Tanzanian novelist, poet, and scholar
- Mathias E. Mnyampala (1917–1969), Tanzanian writer, lawyer, and poet
- Tumi Molekane (b. 1981), South African rapper and poet
- Fadhy Mtanga (b. 1981), Tanzanian creative writer, photographer, graphic designer
- Christopher Mwashinga (b. 1965), Tanzanian author and poet
- Abdilatif Abdalla (b. 1946), Kenyan poet and political activist.
- Mwana Kupona (d. ), Kenyan poet.
- Ebrahim Hussein (b. 1943), Tanzanian playwright and poet
- Haji Gora Haji (1933–2021), Tanzanian poet
- Alamin Mazrui (b. 1948), Kenyan poet
- Kithaka wa Mberia (b. 1955), poet
- Ahmed Sheikh Nabhany (1927–2017), Kenyan poet
Oral literature
19th-century collections
In 1870, Edward Steere published Swahili Tales as Told by Natives of Zanzibar, a collection of 23 Swahili tales with facing-text English translation, along with a selection of proverbs and riddles. Some of the tales included are: "Kisa cha Punda wa Dobi", "The Story of the Washerman's Donkey", also known as "The Heart of a Monkey"; "Mwalimu Goso", "Goso the Teacher", a cumulative tale; and "Sungura na Simba", "The Hare and the Lion", a story about the trickster hare.
Here are some of the proverbs that Steere recorded in Swahili:
- "Mbio za sakafuni hwishia ukingoni." "Running on a roof ends at the edge of it."
- "Angurumapo simba, mteza nani?" "Who will dance to a lion's roaring?"
- "Mlevi wa mvinyo hulevuka, mlevi wa mali halevuki." "He that is drunk with wine gets sober, he that is drunk with wealth does not."
- "Kikulacho kinguoni mwako." "What bites is in your own clothes."
Here are some of the riddles that Steere recorded in Swahili:
- "Nyumba yangu kubwa, haina mlango (yayi)." "My house is large; it has no door (egg)."
- "Kuku wangu akazalia miibani (nanasi)." "My hen has laid among thorns (pineapple)."
- "Popo mbili zavuka mto (macho)." "Two nuts cross a river (eyes)."
Steere also includes the formulaic announcement of a riddle:
- "Kitendawili! — Tega." "An enigma! — Set your trap."
An anonymous publication from 1881, Swahili Stories from Arab Sources with an English Translation, includes 15 stories in Swahili with English translations, plus an additional 14 Swahili stories that are not translated. There is also a selection of proverbs and riddles with English translations.
Here are some of the proverbs:
- "Tulingane sawasawa, kama sahani na kawa." "We match together, like a dish and a cover."
- "Samaki mmoja akioza, wameoza wote." "If one fish is bad, they are all bad."
- "Wa kuume haukati wa kushoto." "The right hand does not cut the left."
- "Paka akiondoka, panya hutawala." "When the cat goes away, the rat is king."
Here are some of the riddles:
- "Gumugumu huzaa teketeke, gumugumu teketeke huzaa (mahindi)." "The hard is the parent of the soft, and the soft of the hard (maize)."
- "Mtoto wangu killa mwaka hulala chini (boga)." "My child each year lies on the ground (pumpkin)."
- "Nyumba vangu kubwa haina taa (kaburi)." "My great house has no lamp (grave)."
- "Nimetupa mshale wangu, mchana kwenda mbali nikitupa usiku hauendi mbali (macho)." "I cast my arrow in the day time, it went far off; it I cast it at night, it does not go far (eyes)."
For additional collections of Swahili prose from the 19th century, see the inventory in J. D. Rollins's A History of Swahili Prose from Earliest Times to the End of the Nineteenth Century.
