- Flashcards
- What is Lingala?
- Core Vocabulary
- Grammar
- Pronunciation
- Common Mistakes
- Resources
- Culture
- Related Guides
1. Flashcards
3. Core Vocabulary (1–161)
High-frequency words and phrases. Use the search box to filter.
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2. What is Lingala?
Lingala is a Bantu language spoken primarily in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and the Republic of Congo (Congo-Brazzaville), with over 20 million speakers. It is also spoken in parts of the Central African Republic, South Sudan, and Angola. Originally a trade pidgin on the Congo River, it developed into a full language and became the language of the Congolese army,1 then spread as a lingua franca throughout the Congo Basin.
Lingala is famously the language of Congolese music — rumba, soukous, ndombolo, and afrobeats from the Congo all use Lingala lyrics. Artists like Fally Ipupa, Werrason, and Papa Wemba have made Lingala recognisable across Africa and beyond.
Why learn Lingala?
- Music — Understand the lyrics of some of the most popular music in Africa.
- The Congo — DRC is the second-largest country in Africa by area and one of the most resource-rich nations on earth. Lingala is essential in Kinshasa and along the Congo River.
- Simpler structure — Lingala has a relatively simplified Bantu noun class system compared to Swahili or Chichewa.
4. Essential Grammar
Verb Structure
Lingala verbs take the infinitive prefix ko-: kolya (to eat), kosala (to do), koya (to come). Subject pronouns precede the verb directly:
- Ngai nakolya — I am eating
- Yo okolya — You are eating
- Ye akolya — He/she is eating
- Biso tokolya — We are eating
Negation
Negation uses the particle te at the end of the sentence:
- Nakolya te — I am not eating
- Nalingi te — I don't want
Tones
Lingala is a tonal language — the same syllable sequence with different tones can mean different things. Standard written Lingala does not mark tones, but they are essential for correct speech. Most learning resources provide audio to help with this.
Question Words
- Nini? — What?
- Nani? — Who?
- Wapi? — Where?
- Ntango nini? — When?
- Mpo na nini? — Why?
- Ndenge nini? — How?
5. Pronunciation Guide
Lingala uses a 5-vowel system (a, e, i, o, u) similar to Spanish or Italian. Consonants are largely similar to French — unsurprising given DRC's French colonial history.
- Vowels are pure and consistent — no diphthongs
- ɔ = open 'o', like in "thought" — often written as 'o' in informal text
- ɛ = open 'e', like in "bed"
- mb, nd, ng, nz = prenasalized consonants, as in other Bantu languages
- Tones are high (unmarked) and low — crucial for meaning
6. Common Mistakes
- Forgetting «te» for negation — Negation always goes at the end: "Nalingi te" (I don't want), not "*Te nalingi".
- Ignoring tones — Even if you can't hear them at first, be aware that tones change meaning. «Mbisi» (fish) vs. different tones = different words.
- French false friends — "Marché" (market) is directly borrowed; but many French words don't transfer. Don't assume French works.
- Confusing «yo» (you) with the English particle — «Yo» is the second-person singular pronoun, always.
7. Learning Resources
- YouTube — Lingala lessons — Search "apprendre le lingala" or "learn Lingala" for community-created video courses.
- Congolese music — Listen to Fally Ipupa, Werrason, Koffi Olomide, Franco Luambo — immersion through music is highly effective.
- Lingala Basic Course (US Foreign Service Institute) — Free PDF available online.
- Omniglot Lingala — Overview of Lingala phonology and grammar at omniglot.com.
8. Culture & Context
Music Capital of Africa
Kinshasa and Brazzaville — two capitals facing each other across the Congo River — together form arguably the most musically productive metropolis in Africa. Congolese rumba (rumba congolaise) and its descendants soukous and ndombolo have influenced music across the continent. Lingala is the language of this sound.
Congo River
Lingala developed along the Congo River as traders, soldiers, and missionaries needed a common language. The river itself — the second longest and deepest in the world — remains a vital transport artery, and Lingala is the language of the river.
Food
Fufu (pounded cassava) and saka-saka (cassava leaves) are staples. Liboke — fish or chicken wrapped and cooked in banana leaves — is a celebrated local dish. Makemba (fried plantain) is everywhere.
Notes
- Salikoko Sangol Mufwene, "Lingala language," Encyclopædia Britannica, accessed June 4, 2026, https://www.britannica.com/topic/Lingala-language. ↩
Bibliography
Mufwene, Salikoko Sangol. "Lingala language." Encyclopædia Britannica. Accessed June 4, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Lingala-language.