Hujambo?
Are you well?
Phrase in 30 Seconds
Hujambo is the standard, polite way to ask 'How are you?' in Swahili, used when greeting one person.
- Means: 'Do you have any problems?' (literally), used as 'How are you?'
- Used in: Formal introductions, meeting elders, or greeting strangers politely.
- Don't confuse: 'Hujambo' (singular) with 'Hamjambo' (plural).
Explanation at your level:
Bedeutung
A formal way to ask how someone is.
Kultureller Hintergrund
Greetings are mandatory. Skipping them is seen as a sign of poor upbringing.
Always wait for the response.
It is polite to wait for 'Sijambo' before continuing.
Bedeutung
A formal way to ask how someone is.
Always wait for the response.
It is polite to wait for 'Sijambo' before continuing.
Teste dich selbst
Which is the correct plural form?
If you are greeting two people, what do you say?
Hamjambo is the plural form for addressing two or more people.
🎉 Ergebnis: /1
Häufig gestellte Fragen
1 FragenYou can, but it might sound formal. Use Mambo for friends.
Verwandte Redewendungen
Sijambo
synonymI am fine.
Wo du es verwendest
Meeting a Teacher
Student: Hujambo, mwalimu?
Teacher: Sijambo, mwanafunzi.
Memorize It
Mnemonic
Hu-JAM-bo: Think of 'Who is jamming?' but politely asking if they have any problems.
Visual Association
Imagine a person bowing slightly to a teacher while saying 'Hujambo'.
Rhyme
Hujambo, Sijambo, we are in the same combo.
Story
A student meets their teacher. They bow and say 'Hujambo'. The teacher smiles and replies 'Sijambo'. They both feel respected.
Word Web
Herausforderung
Use 'Hujambo' with 3 different people today.
In Other Languages
¿Cómo estás?
Hujambo is a negative inquiry, while ¿Cómo estás? is a state inquiry.
Comment allez-vous?
French focuses on movement/state, Swahili focuses on the absence of problems.
Wie geht es Ihnen?
German is more focused on the 'how' of the situation.
O-genki desu ka?
Japanese explicitly asks about health; Swahili asks about 'matters'.
Kaifa haluk?
Arabic is more direct about the 'state' of the person.
Ni hao ma?
Ni hao ma is used much more frequently in casual settings.
Annyeonghaseyo?
Korean uses honorific suffixes; Swahili uses prefix-based agreement.
Como vai?
Portuguese is more flexible in register.
Easily Confused
Learners mix up singular and plural.
Hu = singular, Ha = plural.
FAQ (1)
You can, but it might sound formal. Use Mambo for friends.