KINYARWANDA LANGUAGE

(Redirected from Kinyarwanda)

'Kinyarwanda' is the chief spoken language in Rwanda. It is also spoken in the east of D.R. Congo and in the south of Uganda (Bufumbira-area). It is a tonal language of the Bantu language family (Guthrie D61). It is closely related to Kirundi, spoken in the neighboring country, Burundi, and to Giha of western Tanzania.
The inhabitants of Rwanda and Burundi belong to three different ethnic groups: Hutu, Tutsi, and Twa (although the validity of the ethnic nature is debatable; see [1]). That these groups share the same language is assumed to be due to the Hutu outnumbering the others (see Hutu for a more complete historical perspective).

Contents
Pronunciation
Grammar
Nouns
Verbs
Example translations
References
External links
Pronunciation

a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p (stands alone only in foreign loanwords)
r
s
t
u
v
w
y
z
sh
nt
mp
nk
cy
jy
ny
'ki' and 'ke' can be pronounced interchangeably as [ki] and [ke] or [ci] and [ce] according to speaker's preference
An 'a', 'e', or 'i' at the end of a word followed by a word starting with a vowel often follows a pattern of omission (observed in the following excerpt of the Rwandan anthem) in common speech, though the orthography REMAINS THE SAME.
e.g. 'Reka tukurate tukuvuge ibigwi wowe utubumbiye hamwe twese Abanyarwanda uko watubyaye berwa, sugira, singizwa iteka.' would be pronounced as 'reka tukurate tukuvug' ibigwi wow' utubumiye hamwe twes' abanyarwand' uko watubyaye berwa, sugira singizw' iteka.'

Grammar


Nouns

Kinyarwanda has ten noun classes:

★ Class I: singular ''(u)mu-'', plural ''(a)ba-''

★ Class II: singular ''(u)mu-'', plural ''(i)mi-''

★ Class III: singular ''(i)(ri)-'', plural ''(a)ma-''

★ Class IV: singular ''(i)ki-'' or ''(i)gi-'', plural ''(i)bi-''

★ Class V: singular ''(i)n-'', plural ''(i)n-''

★ Class VI: singular ''(u)ru-'', plural ''(i)n-''

★ Class VII: singular ''(a)ka-'', plural ''(u)tu-''

★ Class VIII: singular ''(u)bu-'', plural ''(u)bu-''

★ Class IX: singular ''(u)ku-'', plural ''(a)ma-''

★ Class X: singular ''(a)ha-'', plural ''(a)ha-''
When preceded by a demonstrative, the vowel prefix is dropped. (e.g. ''umu-'' → ''mu-'').
Class I is used for words representing humans.
Verbs

All Kinyarwanda verb infinitives begin with ''gu-'' or ''ku-'' (morphed into ''gw-'' or ''kw-'' before vowels). To conjugate, the infinitive prefix is removed and replaced with a prefix agreeing with the subject. Then a tense infix can be inserted.

★ Class I: singular ''a-'' (morphs to ''y-'' before vowels), plural ''ba-''

★ Class II: singular ''u-'', plural ''i-''

★ Class III: singular ''ri-'', plural ''a-''

★ Class IV: singular ''ki-'' (morphs to ''cy-'' before vowels), plural ''bi-''

★ Class V: singular ''i-'', plural ''zi-''

★ Class VI: singular ''ru-'', plural ''bi-''

★ Class VII: singular ''ka-'', plural ''tu-''

★ Class VIII: singular ''bu-'', plural ''bu-''

★ Class IX: singular ''ku-'', plural ''a-''

★ Class X: singular ''ha-'', plural ''ha-''
The prefixes for pronouns are as follows:

★ 'I' = ''n-''

★ 'you' (sing.) = ''mu-''

★ 'he/she' = ''y-''/''a-'' (i.e. the singular Class I prefix above)

★ 'we' = ''tu-''

★ 'you' (pl.) = ''u-''

★ 'they' (human) = ''ba-'' (i.e. the singular Class I prefix above)
Tense markers include the following.

★ Present ('I do'): ''-'' (no infix)

★ Present progressive ('I am doing'): ''-ra-'' (morphs to ''-da-'' when preceded by ''n'')

★ Future ('I will do'): ''-za- ''

★ Continuous progressive ('I'm still doing'): ''-racya- ''
The past tense can be formed by using the present and present progressive infixes and modifying the apect marker suffix.

Example translations


Yego Yes
Oya No
Ndabizi I know
Simbizi I don't know
Amazi Water
Ndashaka amazi I want water
Urushaka ikawa Do you want coffee?
Bite Byawe? How are you? (Informal)
Witwa nde? What is your name?
Umusarani uri hehe? Where's the bathroom?
Nitwa… My name is…
Amahoro Peace
Murakoze Thank you
Amakuru How are you? (formal)
Nimeza (I'm) fine
Igicucu Stupid person
Nkunda abaturage b'u Rwanda I like Rwandan people
Ndi... I am...
Abana Children
Igiparu Good conversation
Inka Cow
Muraho Hello
Murabeho Bye
Ijororyiza Good night
Mwaramutseho Good morning (Did you wake up well?)
Izuba sun
Ingurube Pig
Inzu House

References



★ Jouannet, Francis (ed.) (1983). ''Le Kinyarwanda, langue bantu du Rwanda''. Paris: Société d’Études Linguistiques et Anthropologiques de France (SELAF).

★ Kimenyi, Alexandre (1980). ''A Relational Grammar of Kinyarwanda''. University of California Press.

★ Habumuremyi, Emmanuel et al. (2006). ''IRIZA-STARTER 2006: The 1st Kinyarwanda-English and English-Kinyarwanda Dictionary''. Kigali: Rural ICT-Net

External links



''Ethnologue'' report on Rwanda

PanAfrican L10n page on Kinyarwanda ...

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