Luganda
Adapted from Wikipedia · Discoverer experience
Luganda, also called Ganda, is a major language spoken by more than 5.56 million people in Uganda. It is mainly spoken by the Baganda people and others living in central Uganda, including the capital city, Kampala. This language belongs to the Bantu language family and is found in the African Great Lakes region.
Luganda is very important in Uganda. It is the most widely spoken language in the country and is used a lot in trade, especially in cities. Many people who are not native speakers also learn Luganda to communicate, especially in places like Mbale, Tororo, Jinja, Gulu, Mbarara, Hoima, and Kasese. It is also commonly spoken in Rwanda, particularly in the capital, Kigali.
Luganda is closely related to another language called Lusoga, spoken in Busoga. These two languages are almost the same and people can usually understand each other when they speak them. They share about 82% to 86% of their words.
History
Luganda is a Bantu language that comes from a group of languages spoken in the African Great Lakes region. Scholars aren't exactly sure about its beginning, but it developed from an ancient language called Proto-Bantu.
In the 1700s and 1800s, Luganda changed because of people from other places coming in. Traders from Arab countries, missionaries, and people from colonies brought new words. For example, words like "chai" for tea came from Arabic, and words like "ssaati" for shirt and "emotoka" for car came from English.
Phonology
Luganda has special sounds that make it interesting. It includes geminate consonants, which are like doubling a letter, and it can change the length of vowels, making them sound longer or shorter. This helps change the meaning of words.
Luganda is also a tonal language, meaning the pitch or tone of a word can change its meaning. For example, the word kabaka means "king" with one tone, but changing the tone makes it mean something else. This makes Luganda challenging for people whose languages don’t use tones.
Unlike some other languages, Luganda doesn’t usually make vowels longer near the end of words. Instead, they often stay short, like in the name Kampala.
Orthography
Luganda spelling has used a set rules since 1947. It uses the Latin alphabet with one extra letter, ŋ, and a special pair of letters, ny, which counts as one letter. This makes it easy to match sounds with letters — each letter usually stands for one sound.
Simple sounds are written with single letters, while doubled letters show longer sounds. For example, short vowels are single like a, and long vowels are double like aa. Stress and special sound patterns are not written out in spelling.
The five vowels in Luganda are a, e, i, o, and u. These can be short or long. Long vowels are written double when needed, like baana meaning "children" compared to bana meaning "four people".
Consonants mostly match one letter to one sound, except for ny, which is treated as a single letter. Some letters change sound based on what comes after them, like k sounding different before i or y.
Grammar
Luganda, like many Bantu languages, has a structure centered around nouns. Most words in a sentence change to match the noun they relate to, by gender and number. This matching is shown through prefixes added to the beginning of word stems. The parts of speech that change to match nouns include adjectives, verbs, pronouns, and possessive words.
Luganda nouns are grouped into classes, which are somewhat like genders in other languages. There are ten main classes, each with its own prefixes. These classes help organize nouns into groups, such as people, animals, or objects. For example, Class I mostly contains people, while Class III often includes animals. Each class has rules for how its nouns change in number and state.
Verbs in Luganda also change to match their subject and object in gender and number. This means the verb will have different prefixes depending on who or what is doing the action and who or what is receiving the action. The language has many ways to change verbs to show different tenses, moods, and meanings, making it a rich and flexible system.
| Luganda Class | Number | Proto-Bantu Class |
|---|---|---|
| I (MU-BA) | Singular | 1, 1a |
| Plural | 2 | |
| II (MU-MI) | Singular | 3 |
| Plural | 4 | |
| III (N) | Singular | 9 |
| Plural | 10 | |
| IV (KI-BI) | Singular | 7 |
| Plural | 8 | |
| V (LI-MA) | Singular | 5 |
| Plural | 6 | |
| VI (KA-BU) | Singular | 12 |
| Plural | 14 | |
| VII (LU-N) | Singular | 11 |
| Plural | 10 | |
| VIII (GU-GA) | Singular | 20 |
| Plural | 22 | |
| IX (KU-MA) | Singular | 15 |
| Plural | 6 | |
| X (TU) | (no distinction) | 13 |
| Inflection | Gloss | Negative | Gloss |
|---|---|---|---|
| nkola | 'I do' | sikola | 'I don't do' |
| okola | 'you do' | tokola | 'you don't do' |
| akola | 'he, she does' | takola | 'he, she doesn't do' |
| tukola | 'we do' | tetukola | 'we don't do' |
| mukola | 'you (plural) do' | temukola | 'you (plural) don't do' |
| bakola | 'they (class I) do' | tebakola | 'they (class I) don't do' |
| gukola | 'it (class II) does' | tegukola | 'it (class II) doesn't do' |
| bikola | 'they (class IV) do' | tebikola | 'they (class IV) don't do' |
| zikola | 'they (class VII) do' | tezikola | 'they (class VII) don't do' |
Numbers
Luganda has a special way of showing numbers. For the numbers one to five, the words change depending on the thing they describe. The numbers six to ten are single words that do not change.
Numbers from twenty to fifty are made by using the words for two to five with the word for ten. Numbers from sixty to one hundred are single words too.
The same pattern continues for larger numbers. For example, numbers from two hundred to five hundred use the words for two to five with the word for one hundred. Numbers from six hundred to one thousand are single words again.
Here are some of the words used:
- emu means "one"
- bbiri means "two"
- ssatu means "three"
- nnya means "four"
- ttaano means "five"
For larger numbers:
- mukaaga means "six"
- musanvu means "seven"
- munaana means "eight"
- mwenda means "nine"
- kkumi means "ten"
When we put numbers together, we use special words like na and mu. For example:
- 12 is kkumi na bbiri (10 + 2)
- 65 is nkaaga mu ttaano (60 + 5)
- 122 is kikumi mu amakumi abiri mu bbiri (100 + 10 × 2 + 2)
Sample text
Abantu bazaalibwa nga balina eddembe n'obuyinza ebyenkanankana, batondebwa nga balina amagezi era nga basobola okwawula ekirungi n'ekibi bwebatyo, buli omu agwana okuyisa munne nga muganda we.
Translation
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
(Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights)
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Luganda, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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