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Lingala

Lingala Language

Mbóte – Hello

Lingala, Ngala, is a Bantu language that belongs to the Niger-Congo language family. It is spoken in the northwest of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and in the Republic of the Congo. There are also Lingala speakers in Angola and in the Central African Republic. It is thought that Lingala originated from Bobangi (Bangi), a language that has historically functioned as a trade language along the Congo River. With Belgian colonization of the area in the latter part of the 19th century, Bobangi spread into other areas. The colonial administration needed a common language for missionary and administrative purposes, and Bobangi fit their purpose. This common language was called Bangala, as distinct from Bobangi. Catholic missionaries attempted to standardize the language and expand its vocabulary. In the process, the language was renamed Lingala, a term that first appeared in 1903.

 

Status

There are varying estimates of the number of Lingala speakers due to the fact that it is a trade language spoken as a second language by speakers of other languages in areas in which it is spoken. It is spoken by 2.0 million people as a first language and an additional 5 million people as a second language in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and in the Republic of the Congo (Ethnologue). Other estimates place the total number of speakers at 10 million.

 

Dialects

Lingala can be divided in two major varieties: Standard Lingala and Spoken Lingala.

 

Structure

Sound system


The following description is of Standard Lingala, i.e., the literary variety of the language used in formal contexts. All syllables in Standard Lingala end in a vowel. There are no consonant clusters, except /mw/. Borrowed words are adapted, so that English milk, for instance, becomes miliki.

 

Vowels

Standard Lingala has 7 vowel phonemes, i.e., sounds that make a difference in word meaning. However, Lingala spoken in Kinshasa has only five vowels. It lacks the vowels /ε / and /ɔ/.

Standard Lingala exhibits vowel harmony. For instance, words in Brazzaville Lingala may have all close-mid back vowels, e.g., ndobo ‘mouse trap’ or all midback vowels, e.g., ndɔbɔ ‘fishhook’, but it is not possible to mix /o/ and /ɔ/ in the same word. Vowel harmony in Spoken Lingala is not obligatory.

Close
i
u
Close-mid
e
o
Mid
ε
ɔ
Open
a

 

Consonants

The consonant system of Standard Lingala is distinguished by the presence of prenasalized voiced consonant phonemes /mb/, /nd/, /ŋg/ and /nz/. Prenasalized consonants are sequences of nasal+consonant that behave like a single consonant.

Stops voiceless
p
xxx
t
k
x
voiced plain
b
x
d
g
g͡b
voiced prenasalized
ᵐb
xx
ⁿd
ᵑg
x
Fricatives voiceless
f
s
x
voiced plain
v
z
ʒ
x x
voiced prenasalized
ⁿz
x x x
xxx
m
n
ɲ
x
xxx
l
xxx xxx x
Semivowels xx
w
xxx xxx
j
xxx x

 

Tones

Lingala has two tones: high and low. They are used to distinguish between otherwise identical pairs of words and to mark grammatical functions. High tone is represented with an acute accent, while the low tone is unmarked. However, the tone is not always marked in writing.

 

Grammar

The grammar of Lingala shares many features with other Bantu languages. Its major feature is the classification of nouns into various classes and an elaborate verb system.

 

Nouns

 

molakisi
molai
‘tall teacher’
(class 1) teacher
(class 1) tall
bato
bakumisa
‘people praise
(class 2) people
(class 2) praise

 

Verbs

As is common in Bantu languages, Lingala verbs are highly agglutinative. Below are some of their main features:

 

Word order

The basic word order in Lingala is Subject-Verb-Object. However, the subject may follow the verb if the latter is being emphasized.

 

Vocabulary

Prolonged contact with French has resulted in the infusion of many French words into Lingala. Words related to modern living, especially science and technology, are generally borrowed from French. There are also borrowings from Portuguese, e.g., manteca ‘butter’, and English, e.g., buku ‘book’, as well as from neighboring languages such as Koongo, Kituba and Swahili.

Below are a few common words and phrases in Lingala.

Hello Mbóte
Good bye Kendeke malamu
Thank you Botóndi
Please Palado
Thank you Melesi
Yes Iyo
No
Man Mobáli, moto
Woman Mwásí

 

Below are Lingala numerals 1-10.

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
mókó
míbalé
mísáto
mínei
mítáno
motóbá
sambo
mwambi
libwá
zómi

 

Writing

Lingala was first reduced to writing in the early 1900s. Today, it is written with an adapted version of the Latin alphabet, but there is no standard orthography and literacy rates among Lingala speakers are very low.

A a
B b
C c
D d
E e
F f
G g
Gb
H h
I i
K k
L l
M m
Mb mb
Mp mp
N n
Nd nd
Ng ng
Nk nk
Ns ns
Nt nt
Ny ny
Nz nz
O o
P p
R r
S s
Sh sh
T t
V v
W w
Y y
Z z

 

Take a look at Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Lingala.

ETENI YA yambo (1)
Bato nyonso na mbotama bazali nzomi pe bakokani na limemya pe makoki. Bazali na mayele pe base, geli kofanda na bondeko okati na bango.
Article 1
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.

 

Difficulty

Language Difficulty

How difficult is it to learn Lingala?
There is no data on the difficulty of Lingala for speakers of English.