- Flashcards
- What is isiXhosa?
- Core Vocabulary
- Essential Grammar
- Pronunciation
- Common Mistakes
- Learning Resources
- Culture & Context
- Related Guides
1. Flashcards
2. What is isiXhosa?
isiXhosa is a Bantu language of the Nguni branch and one of South Africa's most spoken languages, with around 8–9 million first-language speakers concentrated in the Eastern Cape and Western Cape. It is the home language of figures like Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu.
Its most famous feature is the set of click consonants — written c, x and q — borrowed long ago from neighbouring Khoisan languages. The clicks look intimidating but are completely learnable, and the rest of the system is shared with isiZulu, with which Xhosa is largely mutually intelligible.
Why learn isiXhosa?
- The clicks — Three click positions (dental, lateral, palatal) make Xhosa one of the most distinctive-sounding languages to master.
- Two languages for one — Xhosa and Zulu are close cousins; learning one gives you a big head start on the other.
- South African life — Xhosa opens doors across the Eastern and Western Cape that English never will.
- Clear writing — A regular Latin orthography means spelling predicts pronunciation once you know the clicks.
3. Core Vocabulary (1–62)
High-frequency words and phrases. This is the exact deck used by the flashcard trainer above. Use the search box to filter.
| # | isiXhosa | English |
|---|
4. Essential Grammar
Like all Nguni languages, isiXhosa organises nouns into classes, each with its own prefix, and every word that refers to a noun must carry an agreeing prefix (the "concord").
Noun classes
| Class | Prefix | Example | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 / 2 | um(u)- / aba- | umntu / abantu | person / people |
| 3 / 4 | um(u)- / imi- | umthi / imithi | tree / trees |
| 5 / 6 | i(li)- / ama- | igama / amagama | name / names |
| 7 / 8 | isi- / izi- | isitya / izitya | dish / dishes |
| 9 / 10 | in- / izin- | inja / izinja | dog / dogs |
The verb glues subject + tense + root
With the root -funa ("want"): ndiyafuna (I want), uyafuna (you want), ufuna (he/she wants), sifuna (we want). The subject concord matches the noun class of the subject.
The language name itself shows the pattern: isi- (class 7, languages) + Xhosa = isiXhosa; a Xhosa person is umXhosa, the people amaXhosa.
5. Pronunciation
Five clear vowels (a e i o u). The headline is the three clicks, each of which also has aspirated, voiced and nasal variants:
| Letter | Click | How | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| c | dental | "tsk-tsk" of disapproval, tongue on teeth | icawa (church/Sunday) |
| x | lateral | side of tongue, like urging a horse | xolo (sorry) |
| q | palatal | sharp "pop", tongue on the palate | iqanda (egg) |
| hl | — | voiceless lateral fricative (Welsh "ll") | -hle (beautiful) |
| ngc, nx… | nasal clicks | clicks with a preceding nasal | ingca (grass) |
Xhosa has tone (high/low), but it is not written; stress regularly lands on the second-to-last syllable.
6. Common Mistakes
- Skipping or softening clicks — c, x and q are full consonants; replacing them with k or a glottal stop changes the word.
- Ignoring class agreement — adjectives, verbs and possessives all need the concord that matches the noun's class.
- Reading 'hl' as English h+l — it's a single breathy lateral sound (like Welsh 'll').
- Reducing vowels — keep all five vowels pure and full; no English schwa.
- Treating Xhosa and Zulu as identical — they're close but have real differences in vocabulary and some sounds.
7. Learning Resources
- isiXhosa overview all levels — Background on clicks, classes and orthography.
- "Teach Yourself Xhosa" / Beverley Kirsch grammars beginner — Structured introductions with audio for the clicks.
- Glosbe English–Xhosa dictionary all levels — Dictionary with example sentences.
- SABC Xhosa radio & Xhosa music (e.g. amapiano, gospel) beginner — Authentic listening to internalise the clicks and tone.
- iTalki all levels — Practise clicks live with a Xhosa tutor.
8. Culture & Context
amaXhosa identity
The Xhosa nation comprises many clans (iziduko). Asking someone's isiduko (clan name) is a respectful way to place them, and people often greet by clan praise-names.
Ubuntu
The Nguni concept ubuntu — "a person is a person through other people" (umntu ngumntu ngabantu) — shapes Xhosa social life and South African public discourse.
Song and oral art
From Miriam Makeba's "click song" (Qongqothwane) to izibongo praise poetry, Xhosa culture is deeply musical and oral.