Ke a go rata. = I love you.
Rra is a word used to address a male person in Setswana. For example; 'Hello rra.'
NgiyabongaAccording to the Webster's Online Dictionary, "Thank you" in Zulu is "Ngiyabonga."
Commonly known as Tswana, Setswana is another of South Africa's eleven official languages. Setswana speakers live in the Northern Cape but are also found in Zimbabwe and Namibia one is also able to bump into many Setswana speakers. Furthermore it's Botswana's national language. Being a Bantu language means Setswana is related to other Sotho languages namely Southern and Northern Sotho. Because all the Sotho languages are related it can be hard to learn Tswana as it will be easy to confuse the languages with each other. Within the Setswana community wealth is measured by the number of cattle in a person's possession. The Setswana even has its own Forbes list called the "Setswana Forbes" listing the names of wealthy individuals. Traditional healers, or sangomas, and music play a very important part in their culture. Music consists of only string instruments and human voices. There are many ceremonies to mark lifecycle events within Setswana culture. Funerals have become the most elaborate life-cycle rituals conducted shortly after death and have become one of the main venues for the expression of cultural, time, and resource commitment. Initiations into adulthood used to be elaborate ceremonies lasting a few months, in which girls and boys were taken separately to the bush during winter.
school project for 3rd graded kid
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In Setswana, "please" is translated as "tsamaiso".
Hello in Setswana is "Dumela"
Life in Setswana is "botlhale".
setswana is the same as the other sotho group languages dumela
Rra is a word used to address a male person in Setswana. For example; 'Hello rra.'
Botswana
what does it mean?
Z. I. Matumo has written: 'Setswana English, English Setswana dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, Tswana language
NgiyabongaAccording to the Webster's Online Dictionary, "Thank you" in Zulu is "Ngiyabonga."
Setswana is primarily spoken in Botswana and parts of South Africa, particularly in the North West province. It is also spoken in some parts of Namibia.
Seyantlo is a Setswana word that translates to "hairpin" in English. It is a small, U-shaped pin used to hold hair in place.
Motion verbs in English, such as "go" and "come," can express both direction and manner of movement in a single verb. In Setswana, motion verbs like "tshwara" (take) and "goroga" (enter) separate direction and manner into different verbs. Setswana also includes additional information in its motion verbs, such as the presence of the speaker in the action.