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Here is what we offer!

   Translators
   Interpreters
   Proofreaders
   Online Tutorial
   Tour Guide

Swahili linguists is dedicated to provide swahili language services as listed above and increase the awareness of this unique and growing language.

To view our comprehensive list of services and descriptions click the link below


Chat Live With SLA Representative

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SLA Live Chat Service
Consultant - Selwyn Wacks

Swahili Proverbs

Epuka maovu, nayo yakuepuke
Avoid (what is) evil, and it will avoid you

To see more swahili proverbs refresh the page:)

Swahili linguists Association staff will provide you great services with their noble experience in multilingual practice. Our team is build with Swahili native speakers who come from different background of specialty. Besides swahili, we also offer services in other popular spoken languages in Africa: French, Afrikaans, Zulu, and many more.... Tell us what you want and we will deliver.

Swahili Language & Culture

Who are the Swahili speakers?

Swahili History and Its Origin

Swahili is a people, a culture, a civilization and a Language. Swahili Language is spoken by an estimated 100 million people in Eastern, Central and Southern Africa. Swahili Language is one of the most widely known and understood language in Africa. Many speakers of Swahili, especially those further into the interior of the continent (up country) speak two or more other languages, and use Swahili as a lingua franca. A growing number of first language speakers, however, live in the urban areas of East Africa, where inter-ethnic communities prevail.

Swahili Language also is one of the few African languages that have a pre-colonial written tradition. A thousand years of contact between Indian Ocean peoples and Swahili resulted in a large number of borrowed words entering the language, mainly from Arabic, but also others such as Persian and various Indian languages. At different periods Swahili also borrowed vocabulary from Portuguese and English. Such borrowing is comparable to the proportion of French, Latin, and Greek loans used in English. Although this proportion for Arabic loans may be as high as 50 percent in classical Swahili poetry (traditionally written in Arabic script), it amounts to less than twenty percent of the lexicon of the spoken language. The classical poetry still plays a major role in Swahili culture; it is recited on special occasions and regularly quoted; newspapers often devote space to poetry that has been submitted by their readership.

Swahili Role in Society

English Language is still an important language in post independence East Africa; however Swahili Language plays an increasingly vital role in the daily commercial, political, cultural, and social life of the region at every level of society. This is especially true in Tanzania, where the language is used throughout the country in government offices, the courts, schools and mass media. It has, in fact, become a more important language than English and, in some cases, is replacing English as the language of choice among the educated. Click here to continue..