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Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa

Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa. Insight Day 2 March 2016. The Department at a glance. Members of staff Undergraduate degrees. BA African Language and Culture (Swahili) BA Swahili and Another Subject BA African Studies BA African Studies and Another Subject. 2.

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Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa

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  1. Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa • Insight Day 2 March 2016

  2. The Department at a glance • Members of staff • Undergraduate degrees. • BA African Language and Culture (Swahili) • BA Swahili and Another Subject • BA African Studies • BA African Studies and Another Subject 2

  3. Our distinctive focus on language-based scholarship enables us to engage with African literature, film, and philosophy through the words of Africans in their own languages. We also cover African literature, philosophy, and film in English. Our students gain a wide understanding and new perspectives on the diverse cultures of Africa. 3

  4. http://www.soas.ac.uk/africa/ Title Subtitles • Our languages Body text runs here 4

  5. Yorùbá • Total speakers: more than 25 million • Spoken in: Nigeria, Benin, Togo

  6. "Yínká ló n ki ara rè báun. Yínká ò ju omo odún méje lo tí ó ti máa n gbó àsà kan lénu àwon àgbàlagbà. Àsà náà jo ó lójú púpò. Ní Ode-Òmu, ní ìpínlè Òsun báyìí, tí í se ìlú tí wón ti bí Yínká, bí àwon ènìyàn bá múra oko tán, tí àwon géndé gbé kèké ológeere won síta, tí wón di àpò ìdòho tí won ó fi di kòkó lé e lórí tán, won a ní: "Ó di Èkó kékeré." Kí àwon géndé wonyí tó kúrò nílé ni àwon aya àti àwon omo weere yóò ti kó apere lérí. Won ó máa gba ònà ojà lo. Bí wón bá ti dé ojú ojà, won ó ra èko àti òòlè lówó; òòlè náà ni wón tún n pè ní móín-móín. Wón lè ra ìsáná lówó pèlú, wón á sì tún yára ta erù won kán, wón á gbé e lérí, won a yáa máa kó rei-rei lo. Oúnje ni ìyá Yínká n tà. Ìdí sì nìyí tí Yínká se rí àsíírí àwon tó n lo sóko yìí dé góngó."

  7. Hausa • 1st language: 30m+ • 2nd/3rd language: 20m • Sahel areas: (northern) Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, Ghana, Togo, Sudan (Blue Nile Province)

  8. Amharic • First language: 27 million • Second language: 7-15 million • Spoken in: Ethiopia

  9. Somali • First language: 10-16 million • Second language: 500,000 • Spoken in: Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya

  10. Zulu • First language: 10 million • Second language: 16 million • Spoken in: South Africa, Lesotho

  11. Swahili • First language: 5-10 million • Second language: 80 million • Official Language: Kenya and Tanzania. • Medium of primary and secondary school instruction in Tanzania • Compulsory in all state schools of Kenya up to secondary level. • Also widely spoken in: DRC, Uganda, Rwanda, Somalia, Mozambique, and in major cities of the Gulf states, Europe and North America.

  12. Swahili • It spread through use in local and long-distance trade, religion and education. The influences are visible in loan words, in particular from: • Arabic, e.g., saa, dhahabu, asubuhi, alfajiri, • Persian, e.g. diwani, serikali, achari, • Portuguese, e.g., leso, pesa, gereza, • English,e.g., redio, afisa, basi, motokaa, • and German, e.g., shule, hela.

  13. Swahili Greetings • Hujambo?How are you? (Addressing one person) • Sijambo! I am fine! • HamjamboHow are you? (To more than one person) • Hatujambo!We are fine! • Habari gani?How are things? • Nzuri sana, asante. Very fine, thanks. • Jina lako nani? -- What is your name? • Jina lako (ni) nani? What is your name? • Jina langu (ni)...My name is... • Kwaheri - Good bye! • Kwaheri! (addressing one person) • Kwaherini! (addressing more than one person)

  14. Philosophy Courses • Film Courses • Literature Courses 14

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