Significado
Indicating partial comprehension.
Contexto cultural
In coastal Swahili culture, directness can be seen as aggressive. Using 'vizuri' as a softener is a sign of good upbringing (uungwana). In Nairobi, communication is faster and more direct. You might hear 'Sishiki' more often in informal settings, but 'Sielewi vizuri' remains the standard for respectful interaction. Students are encouraged to use this phrase to show they are paying attention but need help. It is seen as a positive sign of engagement. When negotiating, 'Sielewi vizuri' can be a strategic way to ask for a better explanation of terms or prices without saying 'no' immediately.
The 'Vizuri' Magic
Always add 'vizuri' if you want to sound more polite. It shows you are trying.
Avoid 'Hapana'
Never say 'Mimi hapana elewa'. It sounds like 'Me no understand' and is grammatically broken.
Significado
Indicating partial comprehension.
The 'Vizuri' Magic
Always add 'vizuri' if you want to sound more polite. It shows you are trying.
Avoid 'Hapana'
Never say 'Mimi hapana elewa'. It sounds like 'Me no understand' and is grammatically broken.
Pair it with 'Polepole'
Say 'Sielewi vizuri, sema polepole' to immediately get the speaker to slow down.
Body Language
A slight tilt of the head while saying this phrase makes you look genuinely curious rather than frustrated.
Teste-se
Choose the correct way to say 'I don't understand well' in Swahili.
Which sentence is correct?
'Sielewi' has the correct negative 'i' ending, and 'vizuri' is the correct adverb form.
Fill in the missing part of the negation.
___elewi vizuri.
'Si-' is the negative prefix for the first person singular (I).
Complete the dialogue with the most appropriate phrase.
A: 'Unataka kununua matunda haya?' B: 'Samahani, ________. Unasema nini?'
The speaker asks 'What are you saying?', which implies they didn't understand the previous sentence.
Match the phrase to the situation.
You are in a taxi and the driver is explaining a complicated shortcut.
This is the best phrase to signal that the explanation is too complex.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Recursos visuais
Levels of (Non) Understanding
Partial
- • Sielewi vizuri
- • Sijakuelewa vyema
Total
- • Sielewi kabisa
- • Sielewi hata kidogo
Factual
- • Sijui
- • Sifahamu
Banco de exercicios
4 exerciciosWhich sentence is correct?
'Sielewi' has the correct negative 'i' ending, and 'vizuri' is the correct adverb form.
___elewi vizuri.
'Si-' is the negative prefix for the first person singular (I).
A: 'Unataka kununua matunda haya?' B: 'Samahani, ________. Unasema nini?'
The speaker asks 'What are you saying?', which implies they didn't understand the previous sentence.
You are in a taxi and the driver is explaining a complicated shortcut.
This is the best phrase to signal that the explanation is too complex.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Perguntas frequentes
10 perguntasNot at all! It is actually more polite than just saying 'Sielewi' because it implies you are making an effort to understand.
'Sielewi' is about the logic or meaning of a message. 'Sifahamu' is more about familiarity or knowing a fact.
Technically yes, but 'Sijasikia' (I didn't hear) is more accurate if it's a volume issue.
You can say 'Sikuelewi vizuri' (I don't understand you well).
Yes, it is a professional way to ask for clarification.
In Swahili, verbs ending in 'a' change to 'i' when negated in the present tense.
No, 'mzuri' is an adjective. You must use the adverb 'vizuri'.
You can say 'Sielewi kabisa' (I don't understand at all).
Yes, it is standard Swahili used across all East African countries.
Add 'Tafadhali rudia' (Please repeat) after the phrase.
Frases relacionadas
Sifahamu
similarI don't know/understand
Sijui
similarI don't know
Rudia tena
builds onRepeat again
Sema polepole
builds onSpeak slowly
Sielewi kabisa
specialized formI don't understand at all
Naelewa
contrastI understand