The Swahili lessons I did today were about politics, and one of the words I learnt was uchaguzi, which means election or selection. I was able to guess it’s meaning from the context, and because the -chagu appears in words related to choosing.
Uchaguzi comes from chagua (to choose, pick, pick out, select). Related words include:
- chaguo = choice, selection, the selected
- kuchagua = to choose, elect, deform, distort
- kuchaguliwa = to be chosen
- mchaguzi = fastidious person, choosy person
Sources: https://swahili-dictionary.com/swahili-english/chagua_chagua
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/chagua#Swahili
Another word that I’ve noticed appearing in various forms is (ku)sikia, which means to hear, obey, pay attention, feel or sense. Related words include:
- sikio = ear
- (ku)sikiliza = to listen (to), to hear (a court case)
- sikika = listening
- msikilizaji = a listener
- usikivu = hearing
Sources: https://swahili-dictionary.com/swahili-english/sikia_sikia
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/sikia#Swahili
I’ve been learning Swahili for a few months now, and am beginning to be able to guess the meanings of some words based on other words I know, or to at least recognise that they might be related. I feel like I’m making good progress, but there is a lot more to learn.
I like Swahili but haven’t got around to actually studying it. I spent two weeks in Kenya in 2008 and had a phrase book with me. I managed to have a few really short conversations. Our local guide taught me the sentence “Chakula kilikua kitamu, asante sana”.