The Swahili translation for "the child is falling" is "mtoto ananguka."
You can find all the Swahili words you want by checking one of several Swahili online dictionaries. Here are five:gari, carmtu, personkiti, chairkidole, fingerkalamu, pen or oencil
You pronounce "good morning:" in Swahili exactly as you do in English,for these are English words. Many Swahili users use this English greeting when speaking Swahili. Habari za asubuhi is a common morning greeting in Swahili, meaning "What's the news this morning?" (or How are you this morning?)
They start with the letter "S"
Yes, some Swahili words that are equal to English are: rafiki (friend), nyumba (house), kitabu (book), and muziki (music).
Swahili is mainly influenced by the Arabic culture due to historical trade interactions along the East African coast. Additionally, Swahili has elements of Bantu languages spoken in the region, as many Swahili words have Bantu origins.
One child = mtoto. Children = watoto.
Not a Swahili word or name. It may be a made-up name for a child . . . somewhere.
This question is in the Swahili-to-English section, but the words are not Swahili.
You can find all the Swahili words you want by checking one of several Swahili online dictionaries. Here are five:gari, carmtu, personkiti, chairkidole, fingerkalamu, pen or oencil
In the short story "The Words of a Child" by T. Tompkins, the falling action occurs as the protagonist, Jerome, faces the consequences of his actions and learns a lesson about the power of words and their impact on others. The resolution is his realization that he needs to be more mindful of his speech and the feelings of those around him.
"Nakupenda, mwanangu."
Swahili is a Bantu language, although it has many loan words of Oriental origin.
They pick the names for the Lion King characters from words in the Swahili language. For example, Simba is translated into Swahili meaning "lion". They also chose Swahili words for the characters so it can connect with their personalities such as Zira (who hates Simba and the Pridelanders) means "hate" in Swahili.
Swahili and Swaziland.
Swahili is Bantu language, and most of its vocabulary is based on words from various Bantu languages. Like English, it readily borrows words from other languages. A high percentage, though much less than 50 per cent, of Swahili words have Arabic origins. But the language most rapidly mined for new words these days is English. Some French words have entered the eastern Congo dialect of Swahili, Kingwana.
You pronounce "good morning:" in Swahili exactly as you do in English,for these are English words. Many Swahili users use this English greeting when speaking Swahili. Habari za asubuhi is a common morning greeting in Swahili, meaning "What's the news this morning?" (or How are you this morning?)
If you mean what "great" in swahili is, then they have a couple of words for it, like Nzuri, Poa, Freshi..(last one there is slang)