The Swahili Language

An introduction to some of the most important grammatical concepts of the Swahili language.

Articles

Definite and indefinite articles do not exist in Swahili. Instead the meaning of a word within a sentence must be provided by the context.

So 'mtoto' means 'child', 'a child' or 'the child'.

Nouns

Nouns in Swahili are split into seven classes. Generally, the appropriate class for a noun can be discovered by looking at the first letter(s) of the noun - its prefix. An example, is the word 'mtoto' which means 'child'. This belongs to the M class.

Nouns in Swahili have singular and plural (but no article).

The prefixes in the singular and plural can differ and this is illustrated with the Swahili word for 'child'.  The plual of 'mtoto' is 'watoto' meaning 'children'. The prefix (which dictates the class to which the word belong to) is now 'wa'. For this reason nouns belonging to this class ares commonly referred to as the M/WA class.

So, as opposed to English and other Romance languages, nouns in Swahili change at the beginning, and where an English speaker would add an 's', a Swahili speaker prefixes the noun with the appropriate noun prefix or marker.

The different noun classes have different prefixes and not all differ between the singuar and plural. For example, the N class of nouns (which is the biggest and includes Arabic and Swahili loan words), has the same prefix for singular and plural. The Swahil (an N class noun) for 'cat' is 'paka' and this can mean 'cat', 'cats', 'a cat', 'the cat' and so on.

Adjectives

Adjectives always come after the noun, so in Swahili 'good dog' is 'dog good'.

Adjectives in Swahili agree with the nouns (apart from adjectives of Arabic origin) .

In European languages, a noun agrees with an adjective by changing its ending, so in French the adjective 'beautiful' is either 'beau', 'bel', 'belle', 'beaux' or 'belles' depending on the noun. In Swahili the adjective changes its prefix to agree with the noun.

Two commonly used Swahili adjective (stems) are 'baya' meaning bad and 'zuri' meaning good. Using these with 'mtu' an m class noun :

mtu mzuri           a good person
mtu mbaya         a bad person

the adjective prefix is m. However, t he prefix used depends on the class that the noun belongs to. So, again using 'mtu'  (an m class noun but this time with 'dogo' meaning 'small' :

'mtu mdogo'  a small man.

But, using 'nyumba' (which is an n class noun meaning house) the prefix used by the adjective changes giving:

'nyumba ndogo'  a small house.

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