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The Swazi or siSwati language is a Bantu language of the Nguni group spoken in Eswatini and South Africa by the Swati people. The number of speakers is estimated to be in the region of 2.4 million. The language is taught in Eswatini and some South African schools in Mpumalanga, particularly former KaNgwane areas. Siswati is an official language of Eswatini (along with English), and is also one of the eleven official languages of South Africa.

Swazi
siSwati
Pronunciation[sísʷaːtʼi]
Native toEswatini, South Africa, Lesotho, Mozambique
Native speakers
2.3 million (2006–2011)[1]
2.4 million L2 speakers in South Africa (2002)[2]
Language family
Niger–Congo?
  • Atlantic–Congo
    • Volta-Congo
      • Benue–Congo
        • Bantoid
          • Southern Bantoid
            • Bantu
              • Southern Bantu
                • Nguni
                  • Tekela
                    • Swazi
Writing system
Latin (Swazi alphabet)
Swazi Braille
Ditema tsa Dinoko
Signed forms
Signed Swazi
Official status
Official language in
 South Africa
 Eswatini
Language codes
ISO 639-1ss
ISO 639-2ssw
ISO 639-3ssw
Glottologswat1243
Guthrie code
S.43[3]
Linguasphere99-AUT-fe
Swati
PersonliSwati
PeopleemaSwati
LanguagesiSwati
CountryeSwatini
Geographical distribution of Swazi in South Africa: proportion of the population that speaks Swazi at home.
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Geographical distribution of Swazi in South Africa: proportion of the population that speaks Swazi at home.
  •   0–20%
  •   20–40%
  •   40–60%
  •   60–80%
  •   80–100%
Geographical distribution of Swazi in South Africa: density of Swazi home-language speakers.
  <1 /km²  1–3 /km²  3–10 /km²  10–30 /km²  30–100 /km²  100–300 /km²  300–1000 /km²  1000–3000 /km²  >3000 /km²
Geographical distribution of Swazi in South Africa: density of Swazi home-language speakers.
  •   <1 /km²
  •   1–3 /km²
  •   3–10 /km²
  •   10–30 /km²
  •   30–100 /km²
  •   100–300 /km²
  •   300–1000 /km²
  •   1000–3000 /km²
  •   >3000 /km²

The official term is "siSwati" among native speakers; in English, Zulu, Ndebele or Xhosa it may be referred to as Swazi. Siswati is most closely related to the other Tekela languages, like Phuthi and Northern Transvaal (Sumayela) Ndebele, but is also very close to the Zunda languages: Zulu, Southern Ndebele, Northern Ndebele, and Xhosa.


Dialects


Siswati spoken in Eswatini can be divided into four dialects corresponding to the four administrative regions of the country: Hhohho, Lubombo, Manzini, and Shiselweni.

Siswati has at least two varieties: the standard, prestige variety spoken mainly in the north, centre and southwest of the country, and a less prestigious variety spoken elsewhere.

In the far south, especially in towns such as Nhlangano and Hlatikhulu, the variety of the language spoken is significantly influenced by isiZulu. Many Swazis (plural emaSwati, singular liSwati), including those in the south who speak this variety, do not regard it as 'proper' Swazi. This is what may be referred to as the second dialect in the country. The sizeable number of Swazi speakers in South Africa (mainly in the Mpumalanga province, and in Soweto) are considered by Eswatini Swazi speakers to speak a non-standard form of the language.

Unlike the variant in the south of Eswatini, the Mpumalanga variety appears to be less influenced by Zulu, and is thus considered closer to standard Swazi. However, this Mpumalanga variety is distinguishable by distinct intonation, and perhaps distinct tone patterns. Intonation patterns (and informal perceptions of 'stress') in Mpumalanga Swazi are often considered discordant to the Swazi ear. This South African variety of Swazi is considered to exhibit influence from other South African languages spoken close to Swazi.

A feature of the standard prestige variety of Swazi (spoken in the north and centre of Eswatini) is the royal style of slow, heavily stressed enunciation, which is anecdotally claimed to have a 'mellifluous' feel to its hearers.


Phonology



Vowels


Swazi vowels
Front Back
Close i u
Mid ɛ~e ɔ~o
Open a

Consonants


Swazi does not distinguish between places of articulation in its clicks. They are dental (as [ǀ]) or might also be alveolar (as [ǃ]). It does, however, distinguish five or six manners of articulation and phonation, including tenuis, aspirated, voiced, breathy voiced, nasal, and breathy-voiced nasal.[4]

Swazi consonants
Labial Dental/
Alveolar
Lateral Post-
alveolar
Velar Glottal
plainnasal plainnasal
Click plain ᵏǀ ᵑǀ
aspirated ᵏǀʰ ᵑǀʰ
breathy ᶢǀʱ ᵑǀʱ
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ, ŋɡ
Plosive ejective kʼ, k̬
aspirated
breathy ɡʱ
implosive ɓ
Affricate voiceless tf tsʼ, tsʰ tʃʼ kxʼ
voiced dv dz dʒʱ
Fricative voiceless f s ɬ ʃ h
voiced v z ɮ ʒ ɦ ɦ̃
Approximant w l j

The consonants /ts k ŋɡ/ each have two sounds. /ts/ and /k/ can both occur as ejective sounds, [tsʼ] and [kʼ], but their common forms are [tsʰ] and [k̬]. The sound /ŋɡ/ differs when at the beginning of stems as [ŋ], and commonly as [ŋɡ] within words.[4][5][6]


Tone


Swazi exhibits three surface tones: high, mid and low. Tone is unwritten in the standard orthography. Traditionally, only the high and mid tones are taken to exist phonemically, with the low tone conditioned by a preceding depressor consonant. Bradshaw (2003) however argues that all three tones exist underlyingly.

Phonological processes acting on tone include:

The depressor consonants are all voiced obstruents other than /ɓ/. The allophone [ŋ] of /ŋɡ/ appears to behave as a depressor for some rules but not others.[7]


Orthography



Vowels



Consonants



Labialised consonants



Grammar



Nouns


The Swazi noun (libito) consists of two essential parts, the prefix (sicalo) and the stem (umsuka). Using the prefixes, nouns can be grouped into noun classes, which are numbered consecutively, to ease comparison with other Bantu languages.

The following table gives an overview of Swazi noun classes, arranged according to singular-plural pairs.

Class Singular Plural
1/2 um(u)-1 ba-, be-
1a/2a Ø- bo-
3/4 um(u)-1 imi-
5/6 li- ema-
7/8 s(i)-2 t(i)-2
9/10 iN-3 tiN-3
11/10 lu-, lw-
14 bu-, b-, tj-
15 ku-
17 ku-

1 umu- replaces um- before monosyllabic stems, e. g. umuntfu (person).

2 s- and t- replace si- and ti- respectively before stems beginning with a vowel, e.g. sandla/tandla (hand/hands).

3 The placeholder N in the prefixes iN- and tiN- stands for m, n or no letter at all.


Verbs


Verbs use the following affixes for the subject and the object:

Person/
Class
Prefix Infix
1st sing. ngi- -ngi-
2nd sing. u- -wu-
1st plur. si- -si-
2nd plur. ni- -ni-
1 u- -m(u)-
2 ba- -ba-
3 u- -m(u)-
4 i- -yi-
5 li- -li-
6 a- -wa-
7 si- -si-
8 ti- -ti-
9 i- -yi-
10 ti- -ti-
11 lu- -lu-
14 bu- -bu-
15 ku- -ku-
17 ku- -ku-
reflexive -ti-

Months


Months in Swazi/Swati:

EnglishSwazi/Swati
JanuarynguBhimbidvwane
FebruaryyiNdlovana
MarchyiNdlovulenkhulu
AprilnguMabasa
MayyiNkhwekhweti
JuneyiNhlaba
JulynguKholwane
AugustiNgci
SeptemberiNyoni
OctoberiMphala
NovemberLweti
DecemberyiNgongoni

Sample text


The following example of text is Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:

Bonkhe bantfu batalwa bakhululekile balingana ngalokufananako ngesitfunti nangemalungelo. Baphiwe ingcondvo nekucondza kanye nanembeza ngakoke bafanele batiphatse futsi baphatse nalabanye ngemoya webuzalwane.[9]

The Declaration reads in English:

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."[10]


References


  1. Swazi at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. Webb, Vic (2002). Language in South Africa: The Role of Language in National Transformation, Reconstruction and Development. Impact: Studies in language and society. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 14:78.
  3. Jouni Filip Maho, 2009. New Updated Guthrie List Online
  4. Taljaard, P. C.; Khumalo, J. N.; Bosch, S. E. (1991). Handbook of siSwati. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik.
  5. Corum, Claudia W. (1991). An Introduction to the Swazi (Siswati) Language. Indiana University.: Bloomington: Indiana University Linguistics. pp. 2.7–2.20.
  6. Ziervogel, Dirk; Mabuza, Enos John (1976). A Grammar of the Swati Language: siSwati. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik.
  7. Bradshaw, Mary M. (2003). "Consonant-tone interaction in Siswati". 음성음운형태론연구. 9 (2): 277–294. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  8. "Swati alphabet, pronunciation, and language". Omniglot. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  9. "Universal Declaration of Human Rights - Siswati". Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  10. "Universal Declaration of Human Rights". wikisource.org. Retrieved 20 December 2018.



Software



На других языках


[de] Siswati

Siswati (eigentlich siSwati, auch Swati, Swazi) ist eine in der Republik Südafrika und in Eswatini verbreitete Bantusprache.
- [en] Swazi language

[es] Idioma suazi

El suazi (siSwati, en suazi) es una lengua bantú del grupo nguni hablada en Sudáfrica, Esuatini, Lesoto y Mozambique. Tiene más de 1,5 millones de hablantes y se enseña en los colegios de Esuatini (artículo 3, inciso 2 de la Constitución.).[1] Es lengua oficial de Esuatini (junto con el inglés) y una de las 11 lenguas oficiales de Sudáfrica.

[fr] Swati

Le swati (appelé siSwati dans la langue elle-même, isiSwazi en zoulou) est une langue nationale de l'Eswatini, aux côtés de l'anglais[1]. Il est aussi l'une des onze langues officielles de l'Afrique du Sud.

[it] Lingua swati

La lingua swati, nota anche come swazi (nome nativo siswati) è una lingua nguni parlata in Africa meridionale.

[ru] Свати

Сва́ти (сисвати, свази) — язык группы нгуни семьи банту, распространённый в Эсватини, ЮАР, отчасти в Мозамбике. Близкородственен языкам зулу, коса и ндебеле, является официальным в ЮАР и Эсватини.



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