← Language Guides

Kinyarwanda for English speakers

  1. Flashcards
  2. What is Kinyarwanda?
  3. Core Vocabulary
  4. Grammar
  5. Pronunciation
  6. Common Mistakes
  7. Resources
  8. Culture
  9. Related Guides

1. Flashcards

Loading cards…
Space/Enter flip 1 again 3 got it

3. Core Vocabulary — Top Words (1–395)

High-frequency Kinyarwanda words and phrases. This is the exact deck used by the flashcard trainer above. Use the search box to filter.

#KinyarwandaEnglish

2. What is Kinyarwanda?

Kinyarwanda (also written Rwanda or Ikinyarwanda) is a Bantu language spoken by virtually the entire population of Rwanda1 — roughly 12 million people — making it one of Africa's most linguistically unified countries. It is also spoken in parts of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, and Burundi.

Kinyarwanda is a tonal language with a rich noun class system (15 classes), complex verb morphology, and agglutinative structure. It shares significant mutual intelligibility with Kirundi (Burundi's national language) and is closely related to Luganda (Uganda).

Why learn Kinyarwanda?

4. Essential Grammar

Noun Classes

Like all Bantu languages, Kinyarwanda organises nouns into classes. The class prefix determines subject agreement on verbs and adjectives. Key classes for beginners:

ClassSingular prefixPlural prefixExamples
Peopleum-/umw-ab-/ab-umuntu/abantu (person/people), umwana/abana (child/children)
Trees/plantsum-/umw-im-/iy-umuti/imiti (plant/plants), umuryango/imiryango (family/families)
Objects (large)i-/iy-am-ishuri/amashuri (school/schools), isoko/amasoko (market/markets)
Small thingsaka-/ag-utu-/ud-akarere/uturere (district/districts), agace/utuce (small area)
Abstract/languagesubu-/ubw-ubwenge (intelligence), ubuzima (health), ikinyarwanda (the language)

Verb Structure

Kinyarwanda verbs are highly synthetic. A single verb can encode subject, tense, object, and multiple extensions:

TenseMarkerExampleMeaning
Present-ra-arakorahe/she works (now)
Recent past-a-…-yeakoyehe/she worked (today)
Remote past-a-…-agaakoragahe/she used to work
Future-za-azakorahe/she will work
Negativenti-ntiakorahe/she does not work

Question Words

5. Pronunciation Guide

Kinyarwanda is tonal — high and low tones distinguish meaning. Stress generally falls on the penultimate syllable. Spelling is largely phonetic.

SoundDescriptionExample
a/a/ (father)amahoro (peace)
e/e/ (bed)neza (well / good)
i/i/ (feet)inshuti (friend)
o/o/ (more)muraho (hello)
u/u/ (food)ubuntu (humanity)
rflap /ɾ/ (like Spanish r)kurya (to eat)
ny/ɲ/ (canyon)nyina (mother)
sh/ʃ/ (shoe)ishuri (school)
cy/tʃ/ (church)icyumweru (week)
ry/ɾj/ (rapid r+y)ryari (when?)

Tones: While Kinyarwanda is tonal, tones are not written in standard orthography. Context and listening practice are the best guides.

6. Common Mistakes

7. Learning Resources

8. Culture & Context

A Nation Reborn

Rwanda experienced a devastating genocide in 1994 and has since undertaken one of history's most remarkable programs of reconciliation and reconstruction. The concept of ubwiyunge (reconciliation) is deeply embedded in national life, and Kinyarwanda is central to this shared identity.

Umuganda

Umuganda — mandatory monthly community work — is a practice rooted in Rwandan tradition and revived by the government. On the last Saturday of every month, Rwandans gather to clean streets, build infrastructure, and work collectively. It embodies the spirit of communal responsibility.

Greetings and Respect

Kinyarwanda culture places great emphasis on respectful greetings. Formal greetings like "Muraho" (lit. "you are there") and "Amahoro" (peace) are expected in formal contexts. Asking about someone's family and health is a normal part of greeting.

Agaciro

Agaciro — meaning dignity, worth, or self-reliance — is an important concept in contemporary Rwanda. It underpins the country's philosophy of self-determination and development without dependence.

Notes

  1. René Lemarchand et al., "Rwanda," Encyclopædia Britannica, last updated March 14, 2026, https://www.britannica.com/place/Rwanda.

Bibliography

Lemarchand, René, et al. "Rwanda." Encyclopædia Britannica. Last updated March 14, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/place/Rwanda.