Language family in Sub-Saharan Africa.
A family of languages widely spoken in the southern half of the African continent.
Sinònims
Examples for "bantu languages"
Examples for "bantu languages"
1Yet the Swahili language, though peppered with Arabic loanwords, is closely akin to other Bantu languages.
2Bantu languages can have more than ten.
3Sir Harry attributes most of the higher cultural elements associated with the Bantu languages to the non-Negro invaders.
4That's the inspiration behind the name and the logo, he says, adding that Njorku means elephant in many Bantu languages.
5He had traded for skins in some barbarous district near the shore of Victoria Nyanza, and knew half a dozen Bantu languages.
1The first chapter sketches the history of research into the Bantu laguages.
2Nomadic Mbuti pygmies and indigenous Bantu farmers also live within the reserve
3North of this line are the Negroes proper, south are the Bantu.
4He was a mulatto, of Huguenot Calvinist and Bantu African slave descent.
5Didn't matter if the poor devil was Christian or Indian or Bantu.
6The party, led by Bantu Holomisa, champions good governance and progressive economic policies.
7For a uniform look, try two-strand twists, Bantu knots or rods left overnight.
8In Jamaica, Bantu knots are known as Chiney or China bumps.
9In South Africa, herbalist Makelani Bantu claims he makes a cure-it-all fruit-and-vegetable juice.
10Also, the smaller you make the Bantu knots, the more definition you'll have.
11Even better, no special hair prep is required for Bantu knots.
12This agrees with my own observations of all Bantu native songs.
13The Tokoloshe is a short, hairy, dwarf-like creature from Bantu folklore.
14The Bantu huts contain spoons, wooden dishes, milk pails, calabashes, handmills, and axes.
15Similarly, certain Bantu tribes in South Africa leave dead bodies for jackals to devour.
16Ukushwama, the feast of first fruits;-celebratedby the Bacas and some other Bantu tribes