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Shona

Shona Language

Mhoro – Hello

Shona (chiShona) is a southern Bantoid language belonging to the Niger-Congo language family. It is spoken by 10.7 million people as a first language and by another 1.8 million people as a second or third language in Zimbabwe, Botswana, Malawi, and Zambia (Ethnologue).

 

Status

Shona is an official language of Zimbabwe, along with Ndebele and English. English is used as a lingua franca by those who speak mutually unintelligible languages. It is the de facto national working language of the country. Although Shona is taught in schools, it is generally not the medium of instruction beyond the primary level which is English. There are many newspapers in Shona, and it is also used on the radio.

 

Dialects

There are three main dialects of Shona. There is a considerable degree of variation within each dialect involving pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary. Most dialects are partially intelligible and share most of their vocabulary.

Modern Shona is based on the Karanga dialect of Masvingo Province and the Zezuru dialect of central and northern Zimbabwe.

 

Structure

Sound system

Shona has a simple vocalic and a complex system of consonants that includes sounds rarely found in other languages. All Shona syllables end in a vowel.

 

Vowels

Shona has five vowels.

Close
i
xxx
u
Mid
e
xxxx
o
Open
xxx
a
xxx

 

Consonants

Shona’s consonant system is characterized by the presence of breathy and whistled sounds.

Palatal
Stops voiceless
p
t
k
voiced
b
d
g
breathy-voiced

Fricatives voiceless

f

s
ʃ
h
breathy-voiced
z
whistled voiceless x
sv
whistled voiced x
zv
Affricates voiceless x
ts
voiced x
dz
whistled voiceless x
tsv
whistled voiced x
dzv
Nasals plain
m
n
ɲ
ŋ
breathy

x
Flap/trill plain
r
breathy
Approximantsx
j

 

Tones

Tone is important in Shona since it is used to distinguish between otherwise identical words and to mark grammatical functions.

 

Grammar

A major feature of Shona is classification of nouns into various classes and an elaborate verb system.

 

Nouns

Shona nouns belong to different classes. This is typical of all Bantu languages.

 

Verbs

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

 

Word order

The basic word order in Shona is Subject-Verb-Object. Modifiers follow the nouns they modify.

 

Vocabulary

Shona has borrowed many words from English, Afrikaans, and neighboring languages, e.g., mufarinya ‘cassava’ from Portuguese farinha ‘flour’, yunivhesiti from English ‘university’.

Below are a few words and phrases in Shona.

Hello. Mhoro, mhoroi
Good bye Fambai zvakanaka (by person staying); sarai zvakanaka (by person going)
Thank you Waita zvako, maita zvenyu
Excuse me Pamusoro, pamusoroi
Sorry Ndineurombo
Man murume
Mother amai

 

Below are Shona numerals 1-10.

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
motsi
piri
tatu
china
shanu
tanhatu
nomwe
sere
pfumbamwe
gumi

 

Writing

Shona is an established written language with a highly developed literature. It has a standardized orthography based on the Latin script which was adopted in 1967 after years of negotiation. The script contains 35 symbols. The sound values of the letters depend on the dialect. The alphabet does not represent some sounds that occur in some of the dialects, e.g., there is no symbol for the sounds /l/ and /x/ that are found in some dialects. There is no symbol for breathy /g/ and /r/. Tones are usually not represented in writing.

A a
B b
Ch ch
D d
Dh dh
E e
F f
G g
H h
I i
J j
K k
M m
Mh mh
N n
Nh nh
Ny ny
N’ n’
O o
P p
R r
S s
Sh sh
Sv sv
T t
U u
Vh vh
W w
Y y
Z z
Zh zh
Zv zv

 

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

1. Chisungo cheKutanga
Vanhu vese vanoberekwa vakasununguka uyewo vakaenzana pahunhu nekodzero dzavo. Vanhu vese vanechipo chokufunga nekuziva chakaipa nechakanaka saka vanofanira kubatana nomweya wohusahwira.
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.

 

Did You Know?

Use of hands in Shona

 

Difficulty

Language Difficulty

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