Kinyarwanda

Rwanda
Kinyarwanda
Spoken in
Total speakers Over 12 million[1]
Language family Niger-Congo
  • Atlantic-Congo
    • Benue-Congo
      • Bantoid
        • Southern
          • Bantu
            • Northeast Bantu
              • Great Lakes Bantu
                • Ruanda-Rundi
                  • Rwanda
Official status
Official language in Rwanda
Regulated by No official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1 rw
ISO 639-2 kin
ISO 639-3 kin
Linguasphere

Kinyarwanda (also sometimes known simply as Rwanda or Ruanda) is a Bantu language spoken primarily in Rwanda, where it is nearly universal and one of the official languages of the country. It is also spoken in southern Uganda. Kinyarwanda is mutually intelligible with Kirundi, an official language of Burundi.[1]

Contents

Phonology

Consonants

The table below gives the consonant set of Kinyarwanda, grouping voiceless and voiced consonants together in a cell where appropriate, in that order.

Bilabial Labiodental Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Labiovelar Glottal
Plosive p b t d c ɟ k ɡ
Fricative f v s z ʃ ʒ h
Affricate ts
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Approximant j w
Tap or Flap ɾ

Vowels

The table below gives the vowel sounds of Kinyarwanda.

Front Back
Close i u
Close-mid e o
Open a

All five vowels occur in long and short forms. The distinction is phonemically distinctive. The quality of a vowel is not affected by its length.

Tone

Kinyarwanda is a tonal language.

Orthography

A a B b C c Cy cy D d E e F f G g H h I i
J j Jy jy K k L l M m N n Nk nk Nt nt Ny ny O o
P p R r S s Sh sh T t U u V v W w Y y Z z

The sequences 'ki' and 'ke' may be pronounced interchangeably as [ki] and [ke] or [chi] and [che] according to speaker's preference.

The letters 'a', 'e', or 'i' at the end of a word followed by a word starting with a vowel often follows a pattern of omission (observed in the following excerpt of the Rwandan anthem) in common speech, though the orthography remains the same. For example, Reka tukurate tukuvuge ibigwi wowe utubumbiye hamwe twese Abanyarwanda uko watubyaye berwa, sugira, singizwa iteka. would be pronounced as "Reka tukurate tukuvug' ibigwi wow' utubumiye hamwe twes' abanyarwand' uko watubyaye berwa, sugira singizw' iteka."

In the colloquial language, there are some discrepancies from orthographic Cw and Cy. Specifically, rw (as in Rwanda) is often pronounced /ɾɡw/. The most obvious differences are the following:

Orthog. Pron.
rw /ɾɡw/
pw /pk/
bw /bɡ/
mw /mŋ/
my /mɲ/
tw /tkw/
dw /dɡw /
cw /tʃkw/
by /bdʒ/

Note that these are all sequences; /bɡ/, for example, is not labio-velar /b͡ɡ/. Even when Rwanda is pronounced /ɾwanda/, the onset is a sequence.

Grammar

Nouns

Kinyarwanda has ten noun classes pairs:

singular plural type of words
I (u)mu- (a)ba- humans
II (u)mu- (i)mi-
III (i)(ri)- (a)ma-
IV (i)ki- or (i)gi- (i)bi-
V (i)n- (i)n-
VI (u)ru- (i)n-
VII (a)ka- (u)tu-
VIII (u)bu- (u)bu-
IX (u)ku- (a)ma-
X (a)ha- (a)ha-

When preceded by a demonstrative, the vowel prefix is dropped. (e.g. umu-mu-). Class I is used for words representing humans.

Verbs

All Kinyarwanda verb infinitives begin with gu- or ku- (morphed into kw- before vowels). To conjugate, the infinitive prefix is removed and replaced with a prefix agreeing with the subject. Then a tense infix can be inserted.

singular singular before vowels plural plural before vowels
I a- y- ba- b-
II u- w- i- y-
III ri- ry- a- y-
IV ki- cy- bi- by-
V i- y- zi- z-
VI ru- rw- zi- z-
VII ka- k- tu- tw-
VIII bu- bw- bu- bw-
IX ku- kw- a- y-
X ha- h- ha- h-

The prefixes for pronouns are as follows:

Tense markers include the following.

Example translations
Yego Yes
Oya No
Uvuga icyongereza? Do you speak English?
Bite? What's Up?
Mwaramutse Hi/Good Morning
Amata Milk
Ejo Yesterday
Ejo hazaza Tomorrow
Nzaza ejo I will come tomorrow
Ubu Now
Ubufaransa France
Ubwongereza England
Amerika America
Ubudage Germany
Ububirigi Belgium

The past tense can be formed by using the present and present progressive infixes and modifying the aspect marker suffix.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ethnologue, 15th ed.

References

External links