Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds
In Swahili, you almost always stress the second-to-last syllable of a word.
- Count syllables from the end of the word: 'ku-so-ma' (to read).
- Identify the second-to-last syllable: 'ku-SO-ma'.
- Apply a slightly longer, louder emphasis to that syllable.
Stress Shift in Verbs
| Word | Syllables | Stressed Syllable | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Soma
|
So-ma
|
So
|
SO-ma
|
|
Kusoma
|
Ku-so-ma
|
so
|
ku-SO-ma
|
|
Anasoma
|
A-na-so-ma
|
so
|
a-na-SO-ma
|
|
Wanatusoma
|
Wa-na-tu-so-ma
|
so
|
wa-na-tu-SO-ma
|
|
Wanatusomea
|
Wa-na-tu-so-me-a
|
me
|
wa-na-tu-so-ME-a
|
|
Wanatusomeana
|
Wa-na-tu-so-me-a-na
|
a
|
wa-na-tu-so-me-A-na
|
Meanings
The rule governing which syllable in a word receives the most emphasis during pronunciation.
Standard Stress
The default rhythmic pattern for nearly all Swahili words.
“Rafiki (ra-FI-ki)”
“Habari (ha-BA-ri)”
Reference Table
| Form | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
|
Noun
|
Root + Suffix
|
Ki-TA-bu
|
|
Verb
|
Prefix + Root
|
ku-SO-ma
|
|
Negative
|
Negative Prefix + Verb
|
ha-SO-mi
|
|
Question
|
Verb + Question Marker
|
a-na-SO-ma-je
|
|
Plural
|
Prefix + Root
|
wa-NA-fun-zi
|
|
Adjective
|
Prefix + Root
|
m-ZU-ri
|
طیف رسمیت
Karibu (General)
Karibu (General)
Karibu (General)
Karibu (General)
The Penultimate Rule
Stress
- Penultimate Second-to-last
Stress Comparison
How to Stress
Count syllables from end?
Examples
Common Words
- • Jambo
- • Rafiki
- • Karibu
مثالها بر اساس سطح
Jambo
Hello
Rafiki
Friend
Soma
Read
Habari
News/Hello
Kusoma
To read
Karibu
Welcome
Asante
Thank you
Tunaenda
We are going
Ninapenda
I like
Wanafunzi
Students
Anasoma
He/she is reading
Kitabu
Book
Ninawapenda
I like them
Mwalimu
Teacher
Tunaelewa
We understand
Haikubaliki
It is not acceptable
Umekamilika
It is finished
Wanaowafundisha
Those who teach them
Tutaendelea
We will continue
Inayotambulika
Which is recognized
Tunawajibika
We are responsible
Anayewajibishwa
He who is held responsible
Kutokuelewana
Misunderstanding
Uliotengenezwa
Which was made
بهراحتی اشتباه گرفته میشود
Learners confuse stress (loudness) with pitch (tone).
Learners don't know where one word ends and another begins.
Learners think stress means long vowels.
اشتباهات رایج
KA-ribu
ka-RI-bu
Jamb-O
JAM-bo
RA-fi-ki
ra-FI-ki
SO-ma-a
so-MA-a
ku-SO-ma-a
ku-so-MA-a
a-NA-so-ma
a-na-SO-ma
wa-na-FUN-zi-i
wa-na-fun-ZI-i
ni-na-PEN-da-a
ni-na-pen-DA-a
ha-i-ku-ba-LI-ki-i
ha-i-ku-ba-li-KI-i
tu-na-e-LE-wa-a
tu-na-e-le-WA-a
u-me-ka-MI-li-ka-a
u-me-ka-mi-LI-ka-a
wa-na-o-wa-fun-DI-sha-a
wa-na-o-wa-fun-di-SHA-a
tu-ta-en-de-LE-a-a
tu-ta-en-de-le-A-a
الگوهای جملهسازی
Mimi ni ___.
Ninapenda ___.
___ ni nzuri.
Je, ___ inasoma?
Real World Usage
Habari!
Nataka kahawa.
Mimi ni mwalimu.
Karibu Tanzania.
Safi sana!
Tunashukuru sana.
Count Backwards
Avoid English Habits
Listen to Music
Speak Clearly
Smart Tips
Break it into syllables immediately.
Recount the syllables.
Focus on the penultimate syllable.
Tap your finger on the stressed syllable.
تلفظ
Penultimate Stress
The second-to-last syllable is slightly longer and higher in pitch.
Statement
Ninasoma. (Falling)
Neutral statement.
حفظ کنید
روش یادسپاری
Count two from the back, that's where the stress is at.
تداعی تصویری
Imagine a ladder of syllables. You are climbing up, and you stop and stand firmly on the second-to-last step before reaching the top.
Rhyme
From the end count one, then two, that's the syllable for you.
Story
A traveler named Jambo walks into a village. He counts his steps: one, two. He stops on the second step and shouts 'Jambo!' to the villagers. They all cheer because he got the stress exactly right.
شبکه واژگان
چالش
Pick 5 random Swahili words from a dictionary, break them into syllables, and say them aloud stressing the penultimate one.
نکات فرهنگی
Standard Swahili is spoken with very clear penultimate stress.
Stress is often very rhythmic and melodic.
The stress is often slightly more pronounced.
Swahili is a Bantu language, and the penultimate stress is a common feature of the Bantu family.
شروعکنندههای مکالمه
Habari yako?
Unasoma nini?
Je, unapenda kusoma?
Unadhani ni nini muhimu katika lugha?
موضوعات نگارش
اشتباهات رایج
Test Yourself
ra-FI-ki
ku-___-ma
Find and fix the mistake:
Yes or No
mwa-li-mu
Match each item on the left with its pair on the right:
a-na-SO-ma
True or False
Habari ___?
Score: /8
تمرینهای عملی
8 exercisesra-FI-ki
ku-___-ma
Find and fix the mistake:
Yes or No
mwa-li-mu
Jambo - Rafiki
a-na-SO-ma
True or False
Habari ___?
Score: /8
سوالات متداول (8)
Yes, it is a fixed rule in Swahili.
The stress falls on that syllable.
No, the stress remains the same.
It is likely L1 interference from English.
No, it is a stress-based language.
Break words into syllables and say them aloud.
No, the rule is universal.
Yes, loanwords are adapted to the rule.
Scaffolded Practice
1
2
3
4
Mastery Progress
Needs Practice
Improving
Strong
Mastered
In Other Languages
Penultimate stress for words ending in vowels.
Spanish has exceptions; Swahili does not.
Final stress.
French is final-stressed; Swahili is penultimate-stressed.
Initial stress.
German is initial-stressed; Swahili is penultimate-stressed.
Pitch accent.
Japanese is pitch-based; Swahili is stress-based.
Variable stress.
Arabic is weight-based; Swahili is position-based.
Tonal.
Chinese is tonal; Swahili is stress-based.