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Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds

The Swahili 'ng' sound is a single, continuous nasal sound made at the back of the throat, not two separate letters.

  • Treat 'ng' as one sound, like the 'ng' in 'sing'. Example: 'ng'ombe' (cow).
  • Do not pronounce the 'g' as a hard stop like in 'go'. Example: 'ng'api' (how many).
  • Maintain the nasal airflow through your nose for the duration of the sound. Example: 'ng'oa' (to uproot).
Nasal Airflow (👃) + Back of Tongue (👅) = 'ng' sound

Nasal Sound Patterns

Word Meaning Sound Type Nasal Position
Ng'ombe
Cow
Velar Nasal
Initial
Ngapi
How many
Velar Nasal
Initial
Kung'oa
To uproot
Velar Nasal
Medial
Ng'ara
To shine
Velar Nasal
Initial
Ng'ang'ana
To struggle
Velar Nasal
Initial/Medial
Ng'amua
To discern
Velar Nasal
Initial
Nguruma
To roar
Velar Nasal
Initial
Ng'ambo
Other side
Velar Nasal
Initial

Meanings

The 'ng' sound in Swahili represents the voiced velar nasal consonant /ŋ/, which is a single phoneme.

1

Standard Nasal

The standard representation of the velar nasal consonant.

“Ng'ombe”

“Ngapi”

Reference Table

Reference table for The Nasal 'NG'' Sound
Form Structure Example
Affirmative
ng' + vowel
Ng'ombe
Question
ng' + api
Ngapi?
Verb
ku + ng' + root
Kung'oa
Adjective
ng' + root
Ng'avu
Noun
ng' + root
Ng'ambo
Negative
si + ng' + root
Sing'ari
Short Answer
ng' + ...
Ng'ombe tu
Variation
ng' + a + ...
Ng'ang'ana

격식 수준 스펙트럼

격식체
Ng'ombe ni wangapi?

Ng'ombe ni wangapi? (Market)

중립
Ng'ombe ngapi?

Ng'ombe ngapi? (Market)

비격식체
Ng'ombe ngapi?

Ng'ombe ngapi? (Market)

속어
Ng'ombe ngapi?

Ng'ombe ngapi? (Market)

The Nasal NG Family

NG Sound

Animals

  • Ng'ombe Cow

Actions

  • Ng'oa Uproot

Questions

  • Ngapi How many

수준별 예문

1

Ng'ombe wangu.

My cow.

2

Bei ni ngapi?

How much is the price?

3

Ng'oa mti.

Uproot the tree.

4

Ng'ambo ya mto.

The other side of the river.

1

Ng'ombe wanakula.

The cows are eating.

2

Unataka ngapi?

How many do you want?

3

Ng'ara kama jua.

Shine like the sun.

4

Ng'ang'ana na kazi.

Struggle with the work.

1

Ng'ombe wengi wapo shambani.

Many cows are at the farm.

2

Sijui bei ya nguo hizi ni ngapi.

I don't know how much these clothes cost.

3

Usijaribu kung'oa msumari.

Don't try to pull out the nail.

4

Anang'ara kwa furaha.

He is shining with happiness.

1

Ni muhimu kung'amua ukweli.

It is important to discern the truth.

2

Ng'ombe wa maziwa ni ghali.

Dairy cows are expensive.

3

Ng'ambo ya bahari kuna visiwa.

Across the ocean there are islands.

4

Ng'ang'ana mpaka ufanikiwe.

Strive until you succeed.

1

Ng'ombe dume ananguruma.

The bull is bellowing.

2

Ng'amuzi yake ni ya kipekee.

His perception is unique.

3

Ng'ara kwa nuru ya elimu.

Shine with the light of education.

4

Ng'ambo ya pili ya mlima.

The other side of the mountain.

1

Ng'ang'anizi wake unashangaza.

His persistence is surprising.

2

Ng'ombe wa kijiji wote wamechanjwa.

All the village cows have been vaccinated.

3

Ng'ara kama nyota ya alfajiri.

Shine like the morning star.

4

Ng'amua siri za lugha.

Discern the secrets of the language.

혼동하기 쉬운

The Nasal 'NG'' Sound N vs NG

Learners confuse the standard 'n' with the velar nasal 'ng'.

The Nasal 'NG'' Sound G vs NG

Learners think 'ng' is just a 'g' sound.

The Nasal 'NG'' Sound NG vs N'G

The apostrophe is sometimes omitted.

자주 하는 실수

N-goh-m-beh

Ng'ombe

Adding a hard g sound.

N-gapi

Ngapi

Separating the n and g.

Kung-oa

Kung'oa

Missing the nasal transition.

Ngara

Ng'ara

Ignoring the apostrophe/nasal quality.

Nguruma with hard g

Nguruma

Inconsistent nasalization.

Ng'ambo as N-gambo

Ng'ambo

Incorrect syllable stress.

Ng'ang'ana with hard stops

Ng'ang'ana

Loss of nasal flow.

문장 패턴

___ ni ngapi?

Ng'ombe wangu ___.

Nataka kung'oa ___.

Ng'ambo ya ___ kuna mlima.

Real World Usage

Market very common

Bei ni ngapi?

Farm common

Ng'ombe wanakula.

Texting common

Ng'ombe ngapi?

Travel occasional

Ng'ambo ya mto.

Repair occasional

Kung'oa msumari.

Poetry rare

Ng'ara kama jua.

💡

Nasal Hum

Hum while you say it.
⚠️

No Hard G

Do not pop the G.
🎯

Tongue Position

Keep the tongue back.
💬

Local Usage

Listen to locals.

Smart Tips

Hum through your nose.

N-gombe Ng'ombe

Keep the 'ng' smooth.

N-gapi Ngapi

Focus on the nasal flow.

Kung-oa Kung'oa

Maintain the nasal resonance.

Ng-ambo Ng'ambo

발음

/ŋ/

Velar Nasal

Keep the tongue back and breathe through the nose.

Question

Ngapi? ↗

Rising intonation for questions

암기하기

기억법

Think of a cow (Ng'ombe) humming a song through its nose.

시각적 연상

Imagine a giant 'N' and 'G' holding hands, but the 'G' is wearing a mask over its mouth so only the 'N' sound comes out through the nose.

Rhyme

For the cow, say Ng'ombe with a hum, / Don't let the G sound ever come!

Story

A cow named Ng'ombe was very hungry. She wanted to know how many (ngapi) apples were on the tree. She tried to uproot (kung'oa) the tree to get them, but she just ended up humming a song instead.

Word Web

Ng'ombeNgapiNg'oaNg'araNg'ang'anaNguruma

챌린지

Say 'Ng'ombe' 10 times in a row, focusing on keeping the sound in your nose without a hard 'g' stop.

문화 노트

The 'ng' sound is very clear in standard Swahili.

Often used in local slang.

Pronounced with great precision.

The velar nasal is a common feature in Bantu languages.

대화 시작하기

Ng'ombe wako wako wapi?

Bei ya nguo hii ni ngapi?

Unajua kung'oa msumari?

Ng'ambo ya mto kuna nini?

일기 주제

Describe a cow you saw.
Write about a time you struggled with a task.
Describe the scenery on the other side of a river.
Explain the importance of discerning truth.

자주 하는 실수

Incorrect

정답


Incorrect

정답


Incorrect

정답


Incorrect

정답

Test Yourself

Fill in the missing sound.

___'ombe

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ng
The word is Ng'ombe.
Which is correct? 객관식

How do you say 'How many'?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ngapi
Ngapi is the correct word.
Fix the mistake. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

N-gombe

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ng'ombe
The apostrophe is standard.
Order the words. Sentence Building

ngapi / bei / ni

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Bei ni ngapi?
Correct word order.
Match the word to meaning. Match Pairs

Match each item on the left with its pair on the right:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: True
Correct meanings.
Conjugate 'kung'oa'. Conjugation Drill

I uproot

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nang'oa
Correct prefix.
Is the G hard? True False Rule

In 'Ng'ombe', is the G hard?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: False
It is a nasal sound.
Complete the dialogue. Dialogue Completion

A: Bei ni ___? B: Ni shilingi kumi.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: ngapi
Asking for price.

Score: /8

연습 문제

8 exercises
Fill in the missing sound.

___'ombe

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ng
The word is Ng'ombe.
Which is correct? 객관식

How do you say 'How many'?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ngapi
Ngapi is the correct word.
Fix the mistake. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

N-gombe

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ng'ombe
The apostrophe is standard.
Order the words. Sentence Building

ngapi / bei / ni

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Bei ni ngapi?
Correct word order.
Match the word to meaning. Match Pairs

Ng'ombe - Cow, Ngapi - How many

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: True
Correct meanings.
Conjugate 'kung'oa'. Conjugation Drill

I uproot

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nang'oa
Correct prefix.
Is the G hard? True False Rule

In 'Ng'ombe', is the G hard?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: False
It is a nasal sound.
Complete the dialogue. Dialogue Completion

A: Bei ni ___? B: Ni shilingi kumi.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: ngapi
Asking for price.

Score: /8

자주 묻는 질문 (8)

It is one single nasal sound.

No, never pronounce the G as a hard stop.

It helps distinguish the nasal sound.

Yes, it is very common.

English uses it at the end; Swahili uses it everywhere.

No, you already know the sound.

Yes, it is a phoneme.

It is consistent across dialects.

Scaffolded Practice

1

1

2

2

3

3

4

4

Mastery Progress

Needs Practice

Improving

Strong

Mastered

In Other Languages

English high

sing

Swahili uses it at the start of words.

Spanish moderate

tengo

Swahili uses it as a standalone phoneme.

German high

singen

German often keeps the 'g' written.

Japanese partial

hon

Japanese nasal is alveolar.

Arabic low

none

Arabic uses different guttural sounds.

Chinese high

ang

Chinese uses it as a final consonant.

Learning Path

Prerequisites

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