Oshikwanyama/cultural note

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CULTURAL INFORMATION


 * Greet first before asking or saying anything, even in a shop or on the telephone.
 * Always take time and shake hands when greeting.
 * Always greet elders first.
 * When greeting, females should bend their knees and males should nod their heads.
 * Greeting passersby is considered very polite. It is often expected in the villages, but in town it is not necessary.
 * It is normal for the person who comes to a group of people to initiate greeting.
 * Words like Meme (mother), Tate (father), and especially Meekulu (grandmother) and Tatekulu (grandfather) show respect and are just as important as the greeting itself.
 * Touch your right elbow to show extra respect.
 * Literally, if someone says Wa lele po, they are asking if you laid down last night. Wa uhala po asks if you spent the afternoon, and wa tokelwa po asks if the sky became white for you at dusk. For the record, the answer is always Ehee.

Grammar Corner: Personal Pronouns

In English, we have three different persons: I, you, and he/she/it, as well as their plural counterparts: we, you all, and they. It is very similar in Oshikwanyama:

Oshikwanyama makes no distinction between “he” and “she” – they are both referred to as ye.Quick TipNgaa and tuu are used quite often for emphasis and carry a meaning similar to “really” or “rather”.

Omukwanyama ta ti:~ Okuti kwa dala. ~The forest has delivered (you).(Welcome home, after a long journey.)

Grammar Corner: Numbers

Counting things (e.g. two goats, fifteen people) is a bit trickier, and is explained in Grammar Corner: Counting. The Oshikwanyama number Omafele avali (two hundred) literally means "two hundreds".

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