← Language Guides

Swahili for English speakers

  1. Flashcards
  2. What is Swahili?
  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 500 (1–500)

The 500 most useful high-frequency words and phrases. This is the exact deck used by the flashcard trainer above. Use the search box to filter.

#SwahiliEnglish

2. What is Swahili?

Swahili (Kiswahili) is a Bantu language that serves as the primary lingua franca of East Africa, spoken by over 200 million people as either a first or second language. It is the official language of Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, and is one of the official languages of the African Union.

Swahili has been shaped by centuries of Indian Ocean trade: roughly 35% of its vocabulary comes from Arabic, with significant contributions from Persian, Portuguese, Hindi, and English. Despite this lexical diversity, its grammatical structure is firmly Bantu — noun classes, subject concords, and verb extensions all follow Bantu patterns.

Why learn Swahili?

4. Essential Grammar

Noun Classes

Like all Bantu languages, Swahili organises nouns into classes with prefixes. Key classes for beginners:

ClassSingularPluralExamples
Peoplem-/mw-wa-mtu/watu (person/people), mtoto/watoto (child/children)
Trees/objectsm-/mw-mi-mti/miti (tree/trees), mto/mito (river/rivers)
Thingski-/ch-vi-/vy-kitu/vitu (thing/things), Kiswahili (the language)
GeneralØ/ji-ma-tunda/matunda (fruit/fruits), jicho/macho (eye/eyes)
Languageski-Kiswahili, Kingereza, Kifaransa

Tenses

TenseMarkerExampleMeaning
Present-na-NinakulaI am eating
Past-li-NilikulaI ate
Future-ta-NitakulaI will eat
Negative presentsi-…-SikuliI am not eating
Habitual-hu-NihukulaI always/usually eat

Question Words

5. Pronunciation Guide

Swahili pronunciation is consistent and largely phonetic. Stress almost always falls on the second-to-last syllable.

LetterSoundExample
a/a/ (father)asante (thank you)
e/e/ (bed)kesho (tomorrow)
i/i/ (feet)mimi (I)
o/o/ (more)moyo (heart)
u/u/ (food)usiku (night)
ng'/ŋ/ (singing)ng'ombe (cow) — at word start
dh/ð/ (Arabic)dhahabu (gold) — Arabic loanwords
gh/ɣ/ (Arabic)ghali (expensive)
th/θ/ (Arabic)thelathini (thirty)
ny/ɲ/ (canyon)nyumba (house)

6. Common Mistakes

7. Learning Resources

8. Culture & Context

The Language of East Africa

Swahili emerged as a trade language along the East African coast, blending Bantu roots with Arabic influence from centuries of Indian Ocean commerce. The Swahili Coast — from Somalia to Mozambique — produced a distinctive civilisation reflected in architecture (like the coral stone towns of Lamu and Zanzibar), literature, and cuisine.

Greetings are everything

In Swahili-speaking cultures, greetings are elaborate and important. The exchange "Hujambo / Sijambo" (Are you OK? / I'm OK) is just the start — expect follow-up greetings about family, health, and work. Skipping greetings is considered rude.

Ubuntu

The concept of Ubuntu — "I am because we are" — is widely expressed in Swahili as "Mtu ni watu" (a person is people). Community, hospitality, and collective responsibility are deeply embedded in the culture.