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swahili

Swahili, or Kiswahili, is a Bantu language of the Niger-Congo language family. It is spoken as a first language by coastal communities and as a second language by hundreds of millions across East Africa. Estimates place total speakers well over 100 million, making it one of Africa’s most widely used languages. Swahili functions as a regional lingua franca in the East African and Great Lakes regions, including along the Swahili coast of Tanzania and Kenya and inland areas of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Mozambique.

Swahili developed on the East African coast through long-standing contact between Bantu-speaking communities and Arab traders.

Key varieties include Coastal Swahili (closest to the standard) and urban slang such as Sheng, spoken in

Official status: In Tanzania, Swahili is the national language and lingua franca; in Kenya it is an

This
contact
introduced
extensive
Arabic
loanwords
and
maritime
vocabulary,
while
the
grammar
remains
Bantu.
Historically,
Swahili
was
written
in
the
Arabic
script
(Ajami)
in
religious
and
literary
contexts;
today
it
is
written
in
the
Latin
alphabet.
The
standard
form,
Kiswahili
Sanifu,
is
used
in
education,
media,
and
official
contexts,
while
numerous
regional
dialects
exist.
Kenyan
and
Tanzanian
cities.
The
language
has
absorbed
loanwords
from
Arabic,
Persian,
Portuguese,
English,
and
other
languages
due
to
centuries
of
trade
and
colonization.
official
language
alongside
English.
It
is
widely
taught
in
schools,
used
in
government
and
media,
and
promoted
as
a
regional
language
for
cross-border
communication.