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Chewa language

Index Chewa language

Chewa, also known as Nyanja, is a language of the Bantu language family. [1]

234 relations: Admiral P, African fish eagle, Alan Namoko, Amanita zambiana, Angónia District, Applicative voice, Archaeology of Malawi, Augmentative, Balaka Township, Malawi, Bantu languages, Bantu peoples, Barnaba Zingani, Barotziland-North-Western Rhodesia, Bemba language, Bemba people, Benedicto Wokomaatani Malunga, Bible translations into the languages of Africa, Boma (enclosure), Boundary tone, Cabinet Crisis of 1964 in Malawi, Cannabis in Malawi, Channel Africa, Chewa, Chewa language, Chewa people, Chichewa tenses, Chichewa tones, Chilanga (Lusaka), Zambia, Chipangali, Chipata, Chizumulu Island, Christianity in Malawi, Church of Central Africa Presbyterian – Harare Synod, Circumflex, Cognate object, Community of Christ, Company rule in Rhodesia, Contents of the Voyager Golden Record, Copula (linguistics), Crastinal tense, Culture of Zimbabwe, Demographics of Malawi, Demographics of Zambia, Demographics of Zimbabwe, Devlin Commission, Discontinuous past, Downstep, Eastern Province, Zambia, Eric Charles Twelves Wilson, Esme Langley, ..., Ezra Chadza, Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, Francis Moto, George Simeon Mwase, Glyn Smallwood Jones, Google Translate, Grammatical aspect, Guthrie classification of Bantu languages, Haplogroup T-M184, Harold Baxter Kittermaster, Hastings Banda, Hesperian Health Guides, I Am Because We Are, In vino veritas, Index of language articles, Index of Malawi-related articles, Index of Zambia-related articles, Indian diaspora in Southeast Africa, Innocent Masina Nkhonyo, International uniformity of braille alphabets, Islam in Malawi, ISO 3166-2:MW, ISO 639:n, Jack Mapanje, Jacob (name), Johannes Rebmann, John Msonthi, Kasungu, KiKAR, Komboni, Kunda people, Kwame Attram, Kwekwe, Kwela, Languages of Africa, Languages of Mozambique, Languages of Swaziland, Languages of the African Union, Languages of Zambia, Languages of Zimbabwe, Larry Maluma, Leo "K'millian" Moyo, Leroy Vail, Levi Zililo Mumba, Lisa Cheng (linguist), List of acronyms: N, List of broadcasting languages by country, List of contemporary ethnic groups, List of countries and dependencies and their capitals in native languages, List of ethnic groups of Africa, List of ISO 639-1 codes, List of ISO 639-2 codes, List of language names, List of languages by number of native speakers, List of Latin-script alphabets, List of Latin-script letters, List of multilingual countries and regions, List of newspapers in Malawi, List of official languages, List of official languages by country and territory, List of sovereign states and dependent territories in Africa, List of Wikipedias, List of Zambian names, Little Field Home, Liwonde National Park, Lomwe language, Lusaka, Malawi, Malawi Congress Party, Malawi Lomwe language, Malawian Americans, Malawian kwacha, Malosa (Malawi), Mang'anja, Maravi, Martyn Cundy, Mchinji, Meeussen's rule, Member states of the African Union, Michael Donnelly (priest), Midlands Province, Mirror theory, Misisi, Miss Malawi, Missionary, Mlanje Mountain chameleon, Mlonda, Mlungu dalitsani Malaŵi, Mokoomba, Mount Mabu chameleon, Mozambique, Mtendere Secondary School Thiwi, Mulungu, MV Ilala, MV Mtendere, Mwangwego alphabet, My Secret History, Mzungu, Nadzikambia, Nali Sauce, Natives on Private Estates Ordinance 1928, Ndola, Netball in Malawi, Ngoni language, Ngoni people, Ngozi, Nguni people, Niassodon, Nimbochromis, Nimbochromis polystigma, Nkhata Bay, Nkhotakota, Nkhotakota District, North-Eastern Rhodesia, Northern Rhodesia, Nsanje District, Nsenga language, Nsenga people, NY, Nya, Nyasa languages, Nyasa people, Nyasaland, Official languages of the United Nations, Our Lady of Wisdom Cathedral, Blantyre, Outline of Zambia, Pap (food), Past tense, Peace pole, Philip Euen Mitchell, Pitch-accent language, Plurale tantum, Reduplication, Reformed Church in Zambia, Reformed Church in Zimbabwe, Reformed Church of Mozambique (Mphatso Synod), Regions of Malawi, Robert Earnshaw, Sadza, Scout Motto, Shadreck Chikoti, Sotho verbs, Spotted hyena, St Peter's Roman Catholic Primary School, Aberdeen, Stand and Sing of Zambia, Proud and Free, Sub-Saharan Africa, Sub-Saharan African music traditions, Subject–verb inversion in English, Super VC-10 hap, Thangata, The Big Issue Malawi, The Nation (Malawi), The Very Best, These Girls Are Missing, Thomas Spurgeon Page, Tonga language (Zambia and Zimbabwe), Town Bemba, Tujilane Chizumila, Tumbuka language, Uapaca kirkiana, Ubuntu philosophy, Whyghtone Kamthunzi, William H. J. Rangeley, William Percival Johnson, Willie Zingani, World Englishes, Yao language, Yao people (East Africa), Zambezi FM Radio, Zambia, Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation, Zambian Braille, Zambian kwacha, Zimbabwe, Zimbabwean Australians, Zimbabwean jazz, Zimbabwean New Zealanders, Zodiak Broadcasting Station, Zomba District, Zomba Prison Project, Zone Fam, ZubaBox, 2000 Zambian census, 2010 Zambian census. Expand index (184 more) »

Admiral P

Philip Boardman (born 27 March 1982), known by his stage name Admiral P, is a Norwegian reggae artist.

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African fish eagle

The African fish eagle (Haliaeetus vocifer), or to distinguish it from the true fish eagles (Ichthyophaga), the African sea eagle, is a large species of eagle found throughout sub-Saharan Africa wherever large bodies of open water with an abundant food supply occur.

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Alan Namoko

Alan Nomoko Namoko (1956-1995) was a blind blues and jazz musician from Malawi.

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Amanita zambiana

Amanita zambiana, commonly known as the Zambian slender Caesar, is a basidiomycete fungus in the genus Amanita.

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Angónia District

Angónia District is a district in the northern part of Tete Province in the central region of Mozambique.

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Applicative voice

The applicative voice (abbreviated or) is a grammatical voice that promotes an oblique argument of a verb to the (core) object argument, and indicates the oblique role within the meaning of the verb.

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Archaeology of Malawi

People first began to be interested in Malawi's prehistoric past in the 1920s.

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Augmentative

An augmentative (abbreviated) is a morphological form of a word which expresses greater intensity, often in size but also in other attributes.

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Balaka Township, Malawi

Balaka is a township in Southern Region, Malawi and headquarters for the Balaka District.

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Bantu languages

The Bantu languages (English:, Proto-Bantu: */baⁿtʊ̀/) technically the Narrow Bantu languages, as opposed to "Wide Bantu", a loosely defined categorization which includes other "Bantoid" languages are a large family of languages spoken by the Bantu peoples throughout Sub-Saharan Africa.

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Bantu peoples

The Bantu peoples are the speakers of Bantu languages, comprising several hundred ethnic groups in sub-Saharan Africa, spread over a vast area from Central Africa across the African Great Lakes to Southern Africa.

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Barnaba Zingani

Barnaba M. Zingani (born 3 March 1958) is a Malawian novelist and teacher.

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Barotziland-North-Western Rhodesia

Barotziland-North-Western Rhodesia was a British protectorate in south central Africa formed in 1899.

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Bemba language

The Bemba language, ChiBemba (also Cibemba, Ichibemba, Icibemba and Chiwemba), is a major Bantu language spoken primarily in north-eastern Zambia by the Bemba people and as a lingua franca by about 18 related ethnic groups, including the Bisa people of Mpika and Lake Bangweulu, and to a lesser extent in Katanga in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, and Botswana.

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Bemba people

The Bemba (or 'BaBemba' using the Ba- prefix to mean 'people of', and also called 'Awemba' or 'BaWemba' in the past) belong to a large group of Bantu peoples mainly in the Northern province, Luapula and Copperbelt Provinces of Zambia who trace their origins to the Luba and Lunda states of the upper Congo basin, in what became Katanga Province in southern Congo-Kinshasa (DRC).

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Benedicto Wokomaatani Malunga

Benedicto Wokomaatani Malunga (born in 1962), also known as Ben Malunga, is a Malawian poet, writing in the Chichewa language.

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Bible translations into the languages of Africa

The Bible, or portions of it, have been translated into over 1,000 languages of Africa.

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Boma (enclosure)

A boma is a livestock enclosure, stockade, corral, small fort or a district government office and community used in many parts of the African Great Lakes region, as well as Central and Southern Africa.

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Boundary tone

The term boundary tone refers to a rise or fall in pitch that occurs in speech at the end of a sentence or other utterance, or, if a sentence is divided into two or more intonational phrases, at the end of each intonational phrase.

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Cabinet Crisis of 1964 in Malawi

The Cabinet Crisis of 1964 in Malawi occurred in August and September 1964 shortly after independence when, after an unresolved confrontation between the Prime Minister, Hastings Banda (later Malawi's first President) and the cabinet ministers present on 26 August 1964, three ministers and a parliamentary secretary were dismissed on 7 September.

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Cannabis in Malawi

Cannabis in Malawi is prohibited, but remains a popular drug and is produced for domestic use and export.

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Channel Africa

Channel Africa is the international broadcasting service of the South African Broadcasting Corporation.

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Chewa

Chewa may refer to.

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Chewa language

Chewa, also known as Nyanja, is a language of the Bantu language family.

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Chewa people

The Chewa are a Bantu people of central and southern Africa and the largest ethnic group in Malawi.

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Chichewa tenses

Chichewa (also but less commonly known as Chinyanja, Chewa or Nyanja) is the main lingua franca of central and southern Malawi and neighbouring regions.

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Chichewa tones

Chichewa (a Bantu language of Central Africa, also known as Chewa, Nyanja, or Chinyanja) is the main language spoken in south and central Malawi, and to a lesser extent in Zambia, Mozambique and Zimbabwe.

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Chilanga (Lusaka), Zambia

Chilanga is located 20 km south of Zambia's capital city, Lusaka.

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Chipangali

Chipangali Wildlife Orphanage is a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to the rescue and care of orphaned, injured, abandoned, abused or confiscated wild animals in southern Africa.

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Chipata

Chipata is among a few cities in Zambia.

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Chizumulu Island

Chizumulu Island is the smaller of two inhabited islands in Lake Malawi/Lake Nyasa, the larger being the nearby Likoma island, which together make up the Likoma District.

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Christianity in Malawi

According to 2012 statistics about 85% of Malawi's 11 million people are Christian, with over half of the population Protestant and another 20% Roman Catholic.

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Church of Central Africa Presbyterian – Harare Synod

The Church of Central Africa Presbyterian – Harare Synod was founded in 1965 by immigrant workers from Malawi in search of employment in mining and farming areas in Zimbabwe.

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Circumflex

The circumflex is a diacritic in the Latin, Greek and Cyrillic scripts that is used in the written forms of many languages and in various romanization and transcription schemes.

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Cognate object

In linguistics, a cognate object (or cognate accusative) is a verb's object that is etymologically related to the verb.

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Community of Christ

Community of Christ, known from 1872 to 2001 as the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS), is an American-based international church with roots in the Latter Day Saint movement.

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Company rule in Rhodesia

The British South Africa Company's administration of what became Rhodesia was chartered in 1889 by Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, and began with the Pioneer Column's march north-east to Mashonaland in 1890.

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Contents of the Voyager Golden Record

The Voyager Golden Record contains 116 images plus a calibration image and a variety of natural sounds, such as those made by surf, wind, and thunder, and animal sounds, including the songs of birds, whales and dolphins.

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Copula (linguistics)

In linguistics, a copula (plural: copulas or copulae; abbreviated) is a word used to link the subject of a sentence with a predicate (a subject complement), such as the word is in the sentence "The sky is blue." The word copula derives from the Latin noun for a "link" or "tie" that connects two different things.

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Crastinal tense

A crastinal tense (abbreviated) is a future tense applied to a following or subsequent day.

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Culture of Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe has many different cultures, which may include beliefs and ceremonies, one of them being Shona.

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Demographics of Malawi

This article is about the demographic features of the population of Malawi, including population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

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Demographics of Zambia

This article is about the demographic features of the population of Zambia, including population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and others aspects of the population.

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Demographics of Zimbabwe

This article is about the demographic features of the population of Zimbabwe, including population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

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Devlin Commission

The Devlin Commission, officially the Nyasaland Commission of Inquiry, was a Commission of Inquiry set up in 1959 under the chairmanship of Mr. Justice Devlin, later Lord Devlin, after African opposition to the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, particularly its farming and rural conservation policies, and demands for progress towards majority rule promoted by the Nyasaland African Congress under its leader Dr Hastings Banda led to widespread disturbances in Nyasaland and some deaths.

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Discontinuous past

Discontinuous past is a category of past tense of verbs argued to exist in some languages, especially in West Africa and Polynesia, which carry an implication that the result of the event described no longer holds.

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Downstep

Downstep is a phenomenon in tone languages in which if two syllables have the same tone (for example, both with a high tone or both with a low tone), the second syllable is lower in pitch than the first.

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Eastern Province, Zambia

Eastern Province is one of Zambia's ten provinces.

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Eric Charles Twelves Wilson

Lieutenant Colonel Eric Charles Twelves Wilson VC (2 October 1912 – 23 December 2008) was an English British Army officer and colonial administrator.

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Esme Langley

Esme Ross-Langley (née George, pseudonym Ann Bruce) (26 August 1919 Guisborough, Yorkshire – 20 August 1991 Hertfordshire, England), was a British writer, best known as the founder of the Minorities Research Group and Arena Three (magazine).

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Ezra Chadza

Ezra Jofiya Chadza (1923-1985) or E.J. Chadza, as he signed his books, was a well-known Malawian teacher, author and poet, writing especially in the Chichewa language of Malawi.

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Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland

The Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, also known as the Central African Federation (CAF), was a semi-independent federation of three southern African territories – the self-governing British colony of Southern Rhodesia and the British protectorates of Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland – between 1953 and 1963.

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Francis Moto

Professor Francis P. B. Moto (born 1952) is a Malawian writer, academic, and diplomat.

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George Simeon Mwase

George Simeon Mwase (c. 1880–1962) was a government clerk and later businessman and politician in colonial Nyasaland.

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Glyn Smallwood Jones

Sir Glyn Smallwood Jones (9 January 1908 – 10 June 1992), was a British colonial administrator in Southern Africa.

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Google Translate

Google Translate is a free multilingual machine translation service developed by Google, to translate text.

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Grammatical aspect

Aspect is a grammatical category that expresses how an action, event, or state, denoted by a verb, extends over time.

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Guthrie classification of Bantu languages

The 250 or so "Narrow Bantu languages" are conventionally divided up into geographic zones first proposed by Malcolm Guthrie (1967–1971).

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Haplogroup T-M184

Haplogroup T-M184, also known as Haplogroup T is a human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup.

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Harold Baxter Kittermaster

Sir Harold Baxter Kittermaster, KCMG, KBE (14 May 1879 – 20 March 1939) was governor of British Somaliland (now Somalia), British Honduras (now Belize), and then of the Nyasaland protectorate (now Malawi) in the period before the Second World War.

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Hastings Banda

Hastings Kamuzu Banda (15 February 1898 – 25 November 1997) was the leader of Malawi from 1961 to 1994 (for the first three years of his rule, until it achieved independence in 1964, Malawi was the British protectorate of Nyasaland).

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Hesperian Health Guides

Hesperian Health Guides, formerly known as Hesperian Foundation, is a nongovernmental non-profit organization publishing health guides for trained and untrained people to care for themselves and others.

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I Am Because We Are

I Am Because We Are is a 2008 British-American-Malawian documentary film about AIDS orphans in Malawi.

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In vino veritas

In vino veritas is a Latin phrase that means "in wine, truth", suggesting a person under the influence of alcohol is more likely to speak their hidden thoughts and desires.

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Index of language articles

This is a partial index of 773 Wikipedia articles treating natural languages, arranged alphabetically.

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Index of Malawi-related articles

This page list topics related to Malawi.

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Index of Zambia-related articles

Zambia, officially known as the Republic of Zambia, is a landlocked country in Southern Africa.

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Indian diaspora in Southeast Africa

The Indian diaspora in Southeast Africa consists of approximately 3 million people of Indian origin.

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Innocent Masina Nkhonyo

Innocent Masina Nkhonyo (born 3 March 1987) is a Malawian writer and poet, writing mostly in the Chichewa language.

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International uniformity of braille alphabets

The goal of braille uniformity is to unify the braille alphabets of the world as much as possible, so that literacy in one braille alphabet readily transfers to another.

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Islam in Malawi

Islam is the second largest religion in Malawi after Christianity.

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ISO 3166-2:MW

ISO 3166-2:MW is the entry for Malawi in ISO 3166-2, part of the ISO 3166 standard published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), which defines codes for the names of the principal subdivisions (e.g., provinces or states) of all countries coded in ISO 3166-1.

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ISO 639:n

|- !naa | || ||I/L|| || ||Namla|| || || || || |- !nab | || ||I/L|| || ||Nambikuára, Southern|| || || || || |- !nac | || ||I/L|| || ||Narak|| || || || || |- !nad | || ||I/L|| || ||Nijadali|| || || || || |- !nae | || ||I/L|| || ||Naka'ela|| || || || || |- !naf | || ||I/L|| || ||Nabak|| || || || || |- !nag | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga Pidgin|| || || || || |- !naj | || ||I/L|| || ||Nalu|| || ||纳卢语|| || |- !nak | || ||I/L|| || ||Nakanai|| || || || || |- !nal | || ||I/L|| || ||Nalik|| || || || || |- !nam | || ||I/L|| || ||Nangikurrunggurr|| || || || || |- !nan | || ||I/L||Chinese|| ||Min Nan Chinese|| || ||閩南語|| || |- !nao | || ||I/L|| || ||Naaba|| || || || || |- !nap | ||nap||I/L|| ||nnapulitano||Neapolitan||napolitain||napolitano||拿坡里语||неаполитанский||Neapolitanisch |- !naq | || ||I/L|| ||Khoekhoegowab||Nama (Namibia)|| || ||霍屯督语|| || |- !nar | || ||I/L|| || ||Iguta|| || || || || |- !nas | || ||I/L|| || ||Naasioi|| || || || || |- !nat | || ||I/L|| || ||Hungworo|| || || || || |- !nau |na||nau||I/L|| ||ekakairũ naoero||Nauru||nauruan||nauruano||瑙鲁语; 诺鲁语||науру||Nauruisch |- !nav |nv||nav||I/L|| ||Diné bizaad||Navajo||navaho||navajo||纳瓦霍语; 纳瓦荷语||навахо||Navajo |- !naw | || ||I/L|| || ||Nawuri|| || || || || |- !nax | || ||I/L|| || ||Nakwi|| || || || || |- !nay | || ||I/E|| || ||Narrinyeri|| || || || || |- !naz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Coatepec|| || || || || |- !nba | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyemba|| || || || || |- !nbb | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndoe|| || || || || |- !nbc | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Chang|| || || || || |- !nbd | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngbinda|| || || || || |- !nbe | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Konyak|| || || || || |- !(nbf) | || ||I/L|| || ||Naxi||naxi|| ||纳西语|| || |- !nbg | || ||I/L|| || ||Nagarchal|| || || || || |- !nbh | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngamo|| || || || || |- !nbi | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Mao|| || || || || |- !nbj | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngarinman|| || || || || |- !nbk | || ||I/L|| || ||Nake|| || || || || |- !nbl |nr||nbl||I/L|| ||Ndébélé||Ndebele, South||ndébélé du Sud|| ||南恩德贝勒语||южный ндебеле|| |- !nbm | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngbaka Ma'bo|| || || || || |- !nbn | || ||I/L|| || ||Kuri|| || || || || |- !nbo | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkukoli|| || || || || |- !nbp | || ||I/L|| || ||Nnam|| || || || || |- !nbq | || ||I/L|| || ||Nggem|| || || || || |- !nbr | || ||I/L|| || ||Numana-Nunku-Gbantu-Numbu|| || || || || |- !nbs | || ||I/L|| || ||Namibian Sign Language|| || ||纳米比亚手语|| || |- !nbt | || ||I/L|| || ||Na|| || || || || |- !nbu | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Rongmei|| || || || || |- !nbv | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngamambo|| || || || || |- !nbw | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngbandi, Southern|| || || || || |- !(nbx) | || ||I/E|| || ||Ngura|| || || || || |- !nby | || ||I/L|| || ||Ningera|| || || || || |- !nca | || ||I/L|| || ||Iyo|| || || || || |- !ncb | || ||I/L|| || ||Nicobarese, Central|| ||nicobarés central||中尼科巴语|| || |- !ncc | || ||I/L|| || ||Ponam|| || || || || |- !ncd | || ||I/L|| || ||Nachhiring|| || || || || |- !nce | || ||I/L|| || ||Yale|| || || || || |- !ncf | || ||I/L|| || ||Notsi|| || || || || |- !ncg | || ||I/L|| ||Nisǥa’a||Nisga'a|| || || || || |- !nch | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Central Huasteca|| || || || || |- !nci | || ||I/H|| || ||Nahuatl, Classical|| || ||古典纳瓦特尔语|| || |- !ncj | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Northern Puebla|| || || || || |- !nck | || ||I/L|| || ||Nakara|| || || || || |- !ncl | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Michoacán|| || || || || |- !ncm | || ||I/L|| || ||Nambo|| || || || || |- !ncn | || ||I/L|| || ||Nauna|| || || || || |- !nco | || ||I/L|| || ||Sibe|| || || || || |- !ncp | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndaktup|| || || || || |- !ncr | || ||I/L|| || ||Ncane|| || || || || |- !ncs | || ||I/L|| || ||Nicaraguan Sign Language|| || ||尼加拉瓜手语|| || |- !nct | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Chothe|| || || || || |- !ncu | || ||I/L|| || ||Chumburung|| || || || || |- !ncx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Central Puebla|| || || || || |- !ncz | || ||I/E|| || ||Natchez||natchez||natchez|| || || |- !nda | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndasa|| || || || || |- !ndb | || ||I/L|| || ||Kenswei Nsei|| || || || || |- !ndc | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndau|| || || || || |- !ndd | || ||I/L|| || ||Nde-Nsele-Nta|| || || || || |- !nde |nd||nde||I/L|| ||isiNdebele||Ndebele, North||ndébélé du Nord|| ||北恩德贝勒语||северный ндебеле|| |- !ndf | || ||I/E|| || ||Nadruvian||nadruvien|| || || || |- !ndg | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndengereko|| || || || || |- !ndh | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndali|| || || || || |- !ndi | || ||I/L|| || ||Samba Leko|| || || || || |- !ndj | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndamba|| || || || || |- !ndk | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndaka|| || || || || |- !ndl | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndolo|| || || || || |- !ndm | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndam|| || || || || |- !ndn | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngundi|| || || ||нгунди|| |- !ndo |ng||ndo||I/L|| ||O(shi)wambo||Ndonga||ndonga|| ||恩敦加语; 恩东加语||ндонга|| |- !ndp | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndo|| || || || || |- !ndq | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndombe|| || || || || |- !ndr | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndoola|| || || || || |- !nds | ||nds||I/L|| ||Plattdüütsch; Neddersass'sch||Low German; Low Saxon||bas allemand||bajo sajón||低地撒克逊语 ||нижненемецкий||Niederdeutsch; Niedersächsisch |- !ndt | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndunga|| || || || || |- !ndu | || ||I/L|| || ||Dugun|| || || || || |- !ndv | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndut|| || || || || |- !ndw | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndobo|| || || || || |- !ndx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nduga|| || || || || |- !ndy | || ||I/L|| || ||Lutos|| || || || || |- !ndz | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndogo|| || || || || |- !nea | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngad'a, Eastern|| || ||东恩加达语|| || |- !neb | || ||I/L|| || ||Toura (Côte d'Ivoire)|| || || || || |- !nec | || ||I/L|| || ||Nedebang|| || || || || |- !ned | || ||I/L|| || ||Nde-Gbite|| || || || || |- !nee | || ||I/L|| || ||Kumak|| || || || ||Nenema |- !nef | || ||I/L|| || ||Nefamese|| || || || || |- !neg | || ||I/L|| || ||Negidal|| || ||涅吉达尔语|| || |- !neh | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyenkha|| || || || || |- !nei | || ||I/A|| || ||Hittite, Neo-|| || || || || |- !nej | || ||I/L|| || ||Neko|| || || || || |- !nek | || ||I/L|| || ||Neku|| || || || || |- !nem | || ||I/L|| || ||Nemi|| || || || || |- !nen | || ||I/L|| || ||Nengone|| || || || || |- !neo | || ||I/L|| || ||Ná-Meo|| || || || || |- !nep |ne||nep||M/L|| ||नेपाली||Nepali||népalais||nepalí||尼泊尔语||непали||Nepali |- !neq | || ||I/L|| || ||Mixe, North Central|| || || || || |- !ner | || ||I/L|| || ||Yahadian|| || || || || |- !nes | || ||I/L|| || ||Kinnauri, Bhoti|| || || || || |- !net | || ||I/L|| || ||Nete|| || || || || |- !neu | || ||I/C|| || ||Neo||Neo||Neo|| ||Нэо||Neo |- !nev | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyaheun|| || || || || |- !new | ||new||I/L|| ||नेपाल भाषा||Newari; Nepal Bhasa||newari|| ||尼瓦尔语||неварский||Newari |- !nex | || ||I/L|| || ||Neme|| || || || || |- !ney | || ||I/L|| || ||Neyo|| || || || || |- !nez | || ||I/L|| || ||Nez Perce|| || ||内慈佩尔塞语|| || |- !nfa | || ||I/L|| || ||Dhao|| || || || || |- !nfd | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndun|| || || || || |- !(nfg) | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyeng|| || || || || |- !(nfk) | || ||I/L|| || ||Shakara|| || || || || |- !nfl | || ||I/L|| || ||Ayiwo|| || || || || |- !nfr | || ||I/L|| || ||Nafaanra||nafaanra|| || || || |- !nfu | || ||I/L|| || ||Mfumte|| || || || || |- !nga | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngbaka|| || || || || |- !ngb | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngbandi, Northern|| || || || || |- !ngc | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngombe (Democratic Republic of Congo)|| || || || || |- !ngd | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngando (Central African Republic)|| || || ||нгандо|| |- !nge | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngemba|| || || || || |- !ngg | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngbaka Manza|| || || || || |- !ngh | || ||I/L|| || ||N/u|| || || || || |- !ngi | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngizim|| || || || || |- !ngj | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngie|| || || || || |- !ngk | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngalkbun|| || || || || |- !ngl | || ||I/L|| || ||Lomwe|| || ||隆韦语||ломве|| |- !ngm | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngatik Men's Creole|| || || || || |- !ngn | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngwo|| || || || || |- !ngo | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngoni|| || || ||нгони|| |- !ngp | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngulu|| || || || || |- !ngq | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngurimi|| || || || || |- !ngr | || ||I/L|| || ||Nanggu|| || || || || |- !ngs | || ||I/L|| || ||Gvoko|| || || || || |- !ngt | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngeq|| || || || || |- !ngu | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Guerrero|| || || || || |- !ngv | || ||I/E|| || ||Nagumi|| || || || || |- !ngw | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngwaba|| || || || || |- !ngx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nggwahyi|| || || || || |- !ngy | || ||I/L|| || ||Tibea|| || || || || |- !ngz | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngungwel|| || || || || |- !nha | || ||I/L|| || ||Nhanda|| || || || || |- !nhb | || ||I/L|| || ||Beng|| || || || || |- !nhc | || ||I/E|| || ||Nahuatl, Tabasco|| || || || || |- !nhd | || ||I/L|| || ||Chiripá|| ||chiripá|| || || |- !nhe | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Eastern Huasteca|| || || || || |- !nhf | || ||I/L|| || ||Nhuwala|| || || || || |- !nhg | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Tetelcingo|| || || || || |- !nhh | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahari|| || || || || |- !nhi | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Tenango|| || || || || |- !(nhj) | || || || || ||Tlalitzlipa Nahuatl|| || || || || |- !nhk | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Isthmus-Cosoleacaque|| || || || || |- !nhm | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Morelos|| || || || || |- !nhn | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Central|| || ||中纳瓦特尔语|| || |- !nho | || ||I/L|| || ||Takuu|| || || || ||Takuu |- !nhp | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Isthmus-Pajapan|| || || || || |- !nhq | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Huaxcaleca|| || || || || |- !nhr | || ||I/L|| || ||Naro|| || || || || |- !(nhs) | || || || || ||Southeastern Puebla Nahuatl|| || || || || |- !nht | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Ometepec|| || || || || |- !nhu | || ||I/L|| || ||Noone|| || || || || |- !nhv | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Temascaltepec|| || || || || |- !nhw | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Western Huasteca|| || || || || |- !nhx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Isthmus-Mecayapan|| || || || || |- !nhy | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Northern Oaxaca|| || || || || |- !nhz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Santa María La Alta|| || || || || |- !nia | ||nia||I/L|| || ||Nias||nias|| ||尼亚斯语||ниас||Nias |- !nib | || ||I/L|| || ||Nakama|| || || || || |- !nid | || ||I/E|| || ||Ngandi|| || || || || |- !nie | || ||I/L|| || ||Niellim|| || || || || |- !nif | || ||I/L|| || ||Nek|| || || || || |- !nig | || ||I/E|| || ||Ngalakan|| || || || || |- !nih | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyiha|| || || || || |- !nii | || ||I/L|| || ||Nii|| || || || || |- !nij | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngaju|| || || || ||Ngaju |- !nik | || ||I/L|| || ||Nicobarese, Southern|| || ||南尼科巴语|| || |- !nil | || ||I/L|| || ||Nila|| || || || || |- !nim | || ||I/L|| || ||Nilamba|| || || ||ниламба|| |- !nin | || ||I/L|| || ||Ninzo|| || || || || |- !nio | || ||I/L|| ||нганасаны||Nganasan||nganassan|| ||牙纳桑语; 恩加纳桑语|| || |- !niq | || ||I/L|| || ||Nandi|| || || || || |- !nir | || ||I/L|| || ||Nimboran|| || || || || |- !nis | || ||I/L|| || ||Nimi|| || || || || |- !nit | || ||I/L|| || ||Kolami, Southeastern|| || || || || |- !niu | ||niu||I/L|| ||ko e vagahau Niuē||Niuean||niué|| ||纽埃语||ниуэ||Nieuanisch |- !niv | || ||I/L|| ||нивхгу||Gilyak; Nivkh|| || ||吉利亚克语||нивхский|| |- !niw | || ||I/L|| || ||Nimo|| || || || || |- !nix | || ||I/L|| || ||Hema|| || || || || |- !niy | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngiti|| || || || || |- !niz | || ||I/L|| || ||Ningil|| || || || || |- !nja | || ||I/L|| || ||Nzanyi|| || || || || |- !njb | || ||I/L||Naga|| ||Naga, Nocte|| || || || || |- !njd | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndonde Hamba|| || || || || |- !njh | || ||I/L||Naga|| ||Naga, Lotha|| || || || || |- !nji | || ||I/L|| || ||Gudanji|| || || || || |- !njj | || ||I/L|| || ||Njen|| || || || || |- !njl | || ||I/L|| || ||Njalgulgule|| || || || || |- !njm | || ||I/L||Naga|| ||Naga, Angami||angami naga|| || || || |- !njn | || ||I/L||Naga|| ||Naga, Liangmai|| || || || || |- !njo | || ||I/L||Naga|| ||Naga, Ao||ao naga|| || || || |- !njr | || ||I/L|| || ||Njerep|| || || || || |- !njs | || ||I/L|| || ||Nisa|| || || || || |- !njt | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndyuka-Trio Pidgin|| || || || || |- !nju | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngadjunmaya|| || || || || |- !njx | || ||I/L|| || ||Kunyi|| || || || || |- !njy | || ||I/L|| || ||Njyem|| || || || || |- !njz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyishi|| || || || || |- !nka | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkoya|| || || ||нкоя|| |- !nkb | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Khoibu|| || || || || |- !nkc | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkongho|| || || || || |- !nkd | || ||I/L|| || ||Koireng|| || || || || |- !nke | || ||I/L|| || ||Duke|| || || || || |- !nkf | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Inpui|| || || || || |- !nkg | || ||I/L|| || ||Nekgini|| || || || || |- !nkh | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Khezha|| || || || || |- !nki | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Thangal|| || || || || |- !nkj | || ||I/L|| || ||Nakai|| || || || || |- !nkk | || ||I/L|| || ||Nokuku|| || || || || |- !nkm | || ||I/L|| || ||Namat|| || || || || |- !nkn | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkangala|| || || || || |- !nko | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkonya|| || || || || |- !nkp | || ||I/E|| || ||Niuatoputapu|| || || || || |- !nkq | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkami|| || || || || |- !nkr | || ||I/L|| || ||Nukuoro|| || || ||нукуоро||Nukuoro |- !nks | || ||I/L|| || ||Asmat, North|| || || || || |- !nkt | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyika (Tanzania)|| || || || || |- !nku | || ||I/L|| || ||Kulango, Bouna|| || || || || |- !nkv | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyika (Malawi and Zambia)|| || || || || |- !nkw | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkutu|| || || || || |- !nkx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkoroo|| || || || || |- !(nky) | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Khiamniungan|| || || || || |- !nkz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nkari|| || || || || |- !nla | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngombale|| || || || || |- !nlc | || ||I/L|| || ||Nalca|| || || || || |- !nld |nl||dut||I/L|| ||Nederlands||Dutch||néerlandais||neerlandés||荷兰语||нидерландский||Niederländisch |- !nle | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyala, East|| || || || || |- !nlg | || ||I/L|| || ||Gela|| || || ||гела||Gela |- !nli | || ||I/L|| || ||Grangali|| || || || || |- !nlj | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyali|| || || || || |- !nlk | || ||I/L|| || ||Yali, Ninia|| || || || || |- !nll | || ||I/L|| || ||Nihali|| || || || || |- !(nln) | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Durango|| || || || || |- !nlo | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngul|| || || || || |- !nlq | || ||I/L|| || ||Lao Naga|| || || || || |- !(nlr) | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngarla|| || || || || |- !nlu | || ||I/L|| || ||Nchumbulu|| || || || || |- !nlv | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Orizaba|| || || || || |- !nlw | || ||I/E|| || ||Walangama|| || || || || |- !nlx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahali||nahali|| || || || |- !nly | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyamal|| || || || || |- !nlz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nalögo|| || || || || |- !nma | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Maram|| || || || || |- !nmb | || ||I/L|| || ||Nambas, Big|| || || || || |- !nmc | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngam|| || || || || |- !nmd | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndumu|| || || || || |- !nme | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Mzieme|| || || || || |- !nmf | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Tangkhul||tangkhul naga|| || || || |- !nmg | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngumba|| || || || || |- !nmh | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Monsang|| || || || || |- !nmi | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyam|| || || || || |- !nmj | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngombe (Central African Republic)|| || || ||нгомбе|| |- !nmk | || ||I/L|| || ||Namakura|| || || || || |- !nml | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndemli|| || || || || |- !nmm | || ||I/L|| || ||Manangba|| || || || || |- !nmn | || ||I/L|| || ||!Xóõ|| || || || || |- !nmo | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Moyon|| || || || || |- !nmp | || ||I/E|| || ||Nimanbur|| || || || || |- !nmq | || ||I/L|| || ||Nambya|| || || || || |- !nmr | || ||I/E|| || ||Nimbari|| || || || || |- !nms | || ||I/L|| || ||Letemboi|| || || || || |- !nmt | || ||I/L|| || ||Namonuito|| || || || || |- !nmu | || ||I/L|| || ||Maidu, Northeast|| || || || || |- !nmv | || ||I/E|| || ||Ngamini|| || || || || |- !nmw | || ||I/L|| || ||Nimoa|| || || || || |- !nmx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nama (Papua New Guinea)|| || || || || |- !nmy | || ||I/L|| || ||Namuyi|| || ||纳木义语|| || |- !nmz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nawdm|| || ||纳木义语|| || |- !nna | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyangumarta|| || || || || |- !nnb | || ||I/L|| || ||Nande|| || || ||нанде|| |- !nnc | || ||I/L|| || ||Nancere|| || || || || |- !nnd | || ||I/L|| || ||Ambae, West|| || || || || |- !nne | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngandyera|| || || || || |- !nnf | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngaing|| || || || || |- !nng | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Maring|| || || || || |- !nnh | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngiemboon|| || || || || |- !nni | || ||I/L|| || ||Nuaulu, North|| || || || || |- !nnj | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyangatom|| || || || || |- !nnk | || ||I/L|| || ||Nankina|| || || || || |- !nnl | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Northern Rengma|| || || || || |- !nnm | || ||I/L|| || ||Namia|| || || || || |- !nnn | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngete|| || || || || |- !nno |nn||nno||I/L|| ||Nynorsk||Norwegian Nynorsk||norvégien nynorsk||noruego nynorsk||新挪威语||нюнорск||Nynorsk |- !nnp | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Wancho|| || || || || |- !nnq | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngindo|| || || || || |- !nnr | || ||I/E|| || ||Narungga|| || || || || |- !nns | || ||I/L|| || ||Ningye|| || || || || |- !nnt | || ||I/E|| || ||Nanticoke||nanticoke|| || || || |- !nnu | || ||I/L|| || ||Dwang|| || || || || |- !nnv | || ||I/E|| || ||Nugunu (Australia)|| || || || || |- !nnw | || ||I/L|| || ||Nuni, Southern|| || || || || |- !nnx | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngong|| || || || || |- !nny | || ||I/E|| || ||Nyangga|| || || || || |- !nnz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nda'nda'|| || || || || |- !noa | || ||I/L|| || ||Woun Meu|| || || || || |- !nob |nb||nob||I/L||Norsk Bokmål||Bokmål||Norwegian Bokmål||norvégien bokmål||noruego bokmål||挪威布克莫尔语; 书面挪威语; 波克莫尔语||букмол||Norwegische Bokmål |- !noc | || ||I/L|| || ||Nuk|| || || || || |- !nod | || ||I/L|| ||ล้านนา||Thai (Northern)|| || || || ||Thai (Nord) |- !noe | || ||I/L|| || ||Nimadi|| || || || || |- !nof | || ||I/L|| || ||Nomane|| || || || || |- !nog | ||nog||I/L|| ||Ногай||Nogai||nogaï||nogay||诺盖语||ногайский||Nogaisch |- !noh | || ||I/L|| || ||Nomu|| || || || || |- !noi | || ||I/L|| || ||Noiri|| || || || || |- !noj | || ||I/L|| || ||Nonuya|| || || || || |- !nok | || ||I/E|| || ||Nooksack|| || || || || |- !nol | || ||I/E|| || ||Nomlaki|| || || || || |- !nom | || ||I/E|| || ||Nocamán|| || || || || |- !non | ||non||I/H|| ||norrǿna||Norse, Old||vieux norrois||antiguo nórdico||古诺尔斯语||старонорвежский||Altnordisch |- !(noo) | || ||I/L|| ||Nuučaan̓uł||Nootka|| || ||努特卡语|| || |- !nop | || ||I/L|| || ||Numanggang|| || || || || |- !noq | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngongo|| || || || || |- !nor |no||nor||M/L|| ||norsk||Norwegian||norvégien||noruego||挪威语||норвежский||Norwegisch |- !nos | || ||I/L|| || ||Yi, Eastern Nisu|| || ||东尼苏语|| || |- !not | || ||I/L|| || ||Nomatsiguenga|| || || || || |- !nou | || ||I/L|| || ||Ewage-Notu|| || || || || |- !nov | || ||I/C|| ||novial||Novial|| || ||诺维亚语|| || |- !now | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyambo|| || || || || |- !noy | || ||I/L|| || ||Noy|| || || || || |- !noz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nayi|| || || || || |- !npa | || ||I/L|| || ||Nar Phu|| || || || || |- !npb | || ||I/L|| || ||Nupbikha|| || || || || |- !npg | || ||I/L|| || ||Ponyo-Gongwang Naga|| || || || || |- !nph | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Phom|| || || || || |- !npi | || ||I/L|| || ||Nepali (individual language)|| || || || || |- !npl | || ||I/L|| || ||Southeastern Puebla Nahuatl|| || || || || |- !npn | || ||I/L|| || ||Mondropolon|| || || || || |- !npo | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Pochuri||pochuri naga|| || || || |- !nps | || ||I/L|| || ||Nipsan|| || || || || |- !npu | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Puimei|| || || || || |- !npy | || ||I/L|| || ||Napu|| || || || || |- !nqg | || ||I/L|| || ||Ede Nago|| || || || || |- !nqk | || ||I/L|| || ||Ede Nago, Kura|| || || || || |- !nqm | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndom|| || || || || |- !nqn | || ||I/L|| || ||Nen|| || || || || |- !nqo | ||nqo||I/L|| || ||N'Ko|| || || || || |- !nqq | || ||I/L|| || ||Kyan-Karyaw Naga|| || || || || |- !nqy | || ||I/L|| || ||Akyaung Ari Naga|| || || || || |- !nra | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngom|| || || || || |- !nrb | || ||I/L|| || ||Nara|| || || || || |- !nrc | || ||I/A|| || ||Noric|| || ||诺里语|| || |- !nre | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Southern Rengma|| || || || || |- !nrg | || ||I/L|| || ||Narango|| || || || || |- !nri | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Chokri|| || || || || |- !nrk | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngarla|| || || || || |- !nrl | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngarluma|| || || || || |- !nrm | || ||I/L|| || ||Narom|| || || || || |- !nrn | || ||I/E|| || ||Norn|| || ||诺恩语||норн|| |- !nrp | || ||I/A|| || ||North Picene|| || ||北皮赛恩语|| || |- !nrr | || ||I/E|| || ||Norra|| || || || || |- !nrt | || ||I/E|| || ||Northern Kalapuya|| || || || || |- !nru | || ||I/L|| || ||Narua|| || || || || |- !nrx | || ||I/E|| || ||Ngurmbur|| || || || || |- !nrz | || ||I/L|| || ||Lala|| || || || || |- !nsa | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Sangtam|| || || || || |- !nsc | || ||I/L|| || ||Nshi|| || || || || |- !nsd | || ||I/L|| || ||Southern Nisu|| || ||南尼苏语|| || |- !nse | || ||I/L|| || ||Nsenga|| || || || || |- !nsf | || ||I/L|| || ||Northwestern Nisu|| || || || || |- !nsg | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngasa|| || || || || |- !nsh | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngoshie|| || || || || |- !nsi | || ||I/L|| || ||Nigerian Sign Language|| || ||尼日利亚手语|| ||Nigerianische Zeichensprache |- !nsk | || ||I/L|| ||ᓇᔅᑲᐱ||Naskapi||naskapi||naskapi||纳斯卡皮语|| || |- !nsl | || ||I/L|| || ||Norwegian Sign Language|| || ||挪威手语|| || |- !nsm | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Sumi|| || || || || |- !nsn | || ||I/L|| || ||Nehan|| || || ||нехан||Nehan |- !nso | ||nso||I/L|| ||sePêdi||Northern Sotho, Pedi; Sepedi||sotho du Nord||sepedi||北索托语||северный сото||Nord-Sotho |- !nsp | || ||I/L|| || ||Nepalese Sign Language|| || ||尼泊尔手语|| ||Nepalesische Zeichensprache |- !nsq | || ||I/L|| || ||Miwok, Northern Sierra|| || || || || |- !nsr | || ||I/L|| || ||Maritime Sign Language|| || ||新斯科舍手语|| || |- !nss | || ||I/L|| || ||Nali|| || || || || |- !nst | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Tase|| || || || || |- !nsu | || ||I/L|| || ||Sierra Negra Nahuatl|| || || || || |- !nsv | || ||I/L|| || ||Southwestern Nisu|| || ||西南尼苏语|| || |- !nsw | || ||I/L|| || ||Navut|| || || || || |- !nsx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nsongo|| || || || || |- !nsy | || ||I/L|| || ||Nasal|| || || || || |- !nsz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nisenan|| || || || || |- !nte | || ||I/L|| || ||Nathembo|| || || || || |- !ntg | || ||I/E|| || ||Ngantangarra|| || || || || |- !nti | || ||I/L|| || ||Natioro|| || || || || |- !ntj | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngaanyatjarra|| || || || || |- !ntk | || ||I/L|| || ||Ikoma|| || || || || |- !ntm | || ||I/L|| || ||Nateni|| || || || || |- !nto | || ||I/L|| || ||Ntomba|| || || || || |- !ntp | || ||I/L|| || ||Tepehuan, Northern|| ||tepehuano septentrional|| || || |- !ntr | || ||I/L|| || ||Delo|| || || || || |- !nts | || ||I/E|| || ||Natagaimas|| || || || || |- !ntu | || ||I/L|| || ||Natügu|| || || || || |- !ntw | || ||I/E|| || ||Nottoway||nottoway||nottoway|| || || |- !ntx | || ||I/L|| || ||Tangkhul Naga (Myanmar)|| || || || || |- !nty | || ||I/L|| || ||Mantsi|| || || || || |- !ntz | || ||I/L|| || ||Natanzi|| || || || || |- !nua | || ||I/L|| || ||Yuaga|| || || || || |- !nuc | || ||I/E|| || ||Nukuini||nukuini||nukuini|| || || |- !nud | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngala|| || ||恩加拉语|| || |- !nue | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngundu|| || || || || |- !nuf | || ||I/L|| || ||Nusu|| || ||怒苏语|| || |- !nug | || ||I/E|| || ||Nungali|| || || || || |- !nuh | || ||I/L|| || ||Ndunda|| || || || || |- !nui | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngumbi|| || || || || |- !nuj | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyole|| || || || || |- !nuk | || ||I/L|| || ||Nuu-chah-nulth|| || || || || |- !nul | || ||I/L|| || ||Nusa Laut|| || || || || |- !num | || ||I/L|| || ||Niuafo'ou|| || || || || |- !nun | || ||I/L|| || ||Nung (Burma)|| || ||怒语|| || |- !nuo | || ||I/L|| || ||Nguôn|| || || || || |- !nup | || ||I/L|| || ||Nupe-Nupe-Tako|| || || || || |- !nuq | || ||I/L|| || ||Nukumanu|| || || || || |- !nur | || ||I/L|| || ||Nukuria|| || || || || |- !nus | || ||I/L|| || ||Nuer||nuer|| ||努埃尔语|| || |- !nut | || ||I/L|| || ||Nung (Viet Nam)|| || ||侬语|| || |- !nuu | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngbundu|| || || || || |- !nuv | || ||I/L|| || ||Nuni, Northern|| || || || || |- !nuw | || ||I/L|| || ||Nguluwan|| || || || || |- !nux | || ||I/L|| || ||Mehek|| || || || || |- !nuy | || ||I/L|| || ||Nunggubuyu|| || || || || |- !nuz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nahuatl, Tlamacazapa|| || || || || |- !nvh | || ||I/L|| || ||Nasarian|| || || || || |- !nvm | || ||I/L|| || ||Namiae|| || || || || |- !nvo | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyokon|| || || || || |- !nwa | || ||I/E|| || ||Nawathinehena|| || || || || |- !nwb | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyabwa|| || || || || |- !nwc | ||nwc||I/H|| || ||Classical Newari; Old Newari||newari classique|| ||古典尼瓦尔语|| || |- !nwe | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngwe|| || || || || |- !nwg | || ||I/E|| || ||Ngayawung|| || || || || |- !nwi | || ||I/L|| || ||Tanna, Southwest|| || || || ||Südwest-Tanna |- !nwm | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyamusa-Molo|| || || || || |- !nwo | || ||I/E|| || ||Nauo|| || || || || |- !nwr | || ||I/L|| || ||Nawaru|| || || || || |- !nwx | || ||I/H|| || ||Newar, Middle|| || ||中古尼瓦尔语|| || |- !nwy | || ||I/E|| || ||Nottoway-Meherrin|| || || || || |- !nxa | || ||I/L|| || ||Nauete|| || || || || |- !nxd | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngando (Democratic Republic of Congo)|| || || || || |- !nxe | || ||I/L|| || ||Nage|| || || || || |- !nxg | || ||I/L|| || ||Ngad'a|| || ||恩加达语|| ||Ngad'a |- !nxi | || ||I/L|| || ||Nindi|| || || || || |- !(nxj) | || || || || ||Nyadu|| || || || || |- !nxk | || ||I/L|| || ||Koki Naga|| || || || || |- !nxl | || ||I/L|| || ||Nuaulu, South|| || || || || |- !nxm | || ||I/A|| || ||Numidian|| || || || || |- !nxn | || ||I/E|| || ||Ngawun|| || || || || |- !nxq | || ||I/L|| || ||Naxi|| || || || || |- !nxr | || ||I/L|| || ||Ninggerum|| || || || || |- !nxu | || ||I/E|| || ||Narau|| || || || || |- !nxx | || ||I/L|| || ||Nafri|| || || || || |- !nya |ny||nya||I/L|| ||chiCheŵa||Chichewa; Nyanja||nyanja||ñanya||尼昂加语; 齐切瓦语 ||ньянджа||Nyanja |- !nyb | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyangbo|| || || || || |- !nyc | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyanga-li|| || || || || |- !nyd | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyore|| || || || || |- !nye | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyengo|| || || || || |- !nyf | || ||I/L|| || ||Giryama|| || || || || |- !nyg | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyindu|| || || || || |- !nyh | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyigina|| || || || || |- !nyi | || ||I/L|| || ||Ama (Sudan)|| || || || || |- !nyj | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyanga|| || || ||ньянга|| |- !nyk | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyaneka|| || || || || |- !nyl | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyeu|| || || || || |- !nym | ||nym||I/L|| ||Kinyamwezi||Nyamwezi||nyamwezi||nyamwezi||尼扬韦齐语||ньямвези|| |- !nyn | ||nyn||I/L|| || ||Nyankole||nyankolé|| ||尼扬科勒语||ньянколе|| |- !nyo | ||nyo||I/L|| ||Runyoro||Nyoro||nyoro|| ||尼奥罗语||ньоро|| |- !nyp | || ||I/E|| || ||Nyang'i|| || || || || |- !nyq | || ||I/L|| || ||Nayini|| || || || || |- !nyr | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyiha (Malawi)|| || || || || |- !nys | || ||I/L||Pama–Nyungan ||Noongar ||Nyungah|| || || || || |- !nyt | || ||I/E|| || ||Nyawaygi|| || || || || |- !nyu | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyungwe|| || || || || |- !nyv | || ||I/E|| || ||Nyulnyul|| || || || || |- !nyw | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyaw|| || ||侥语|| || |- !nyx | || ||I/E|| || ||Nganyaywana|| || || || || |- !nyy | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyakyusa|| || || ||ньякьюса|| |- !nza | || ||I/L|| || ||Mbembe, Tigon|| || || || || |- !nzb | || ||I/L|| || ||Njebi|| || || ||нджеби|| |- !nzi | ||nzi||I/L|| || ||Nzima||nzema|| ||恩济马语||нзима|| |- !nzk | || ||I/L|| || ||Nzakara|| || || || || |- !nzm | || ||I/L|| || ||Naga, Zeme||zeme naga|| || || || |- !nzs | || ||I/L|| || ||New Zealand Sign Language|| || ||新西兰手语|| ||Neuseeländische Zeichensprache |- !nzu | || ||I/L|| || ||Teke-Nzikou|| || || || || |- !nzy | || ||I/L|| || ||Nzakambay|| || || || || |- !nzz | || ||I/L|| || ||Nanga Dama Dogon|| || || || || | Category:ISO 639.

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Jack Mapanje

Jack Mapanje (born 25 March 1944), ProQuest Learning: Literature.

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Jacob (name)

Jacob is a common male first name and a less well-known surname.

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Johannes Rebmann

Johannes Rebmann (January 16, 1820 – October 4, 1876) was a German missionary and explorer credited with feats including being the first European, along with his colleague Johann Ludwig Krapf, to enter Africa from the Indian Ocean coast.

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John Msonthi

John Dustan Msonthi was a Malawian politician.

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Kasungu

Kasungu is a town in the Kasungu District of the Central Region of Malawi.

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KiKAR

KiKAR (also known as Kikeya) is, or was, a Swahili pidgin spoken among the King's African Rifles (KAR) of British colonial East Africa (Kenya, Uganda, Malawi).

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Komboni

A komboni is a type of compound or informal housing area common to Zambia, particularly the capital city of Lusaka.

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Kunda people

The Kunda people are an ethnic group of Zambia, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique.

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Kwame Attram

Kwame Attram(born 10 January 1989 in Ghana) is a Ghanaian professional footballer striker.

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Kwekwe

Kwekwe, known until 1983 as Que Que, is a city in central Zimbabwe.

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Kwela

Kwela is a pennywhistle-based street music from southern Africa with jazzy underpinnings and a distinctive, skiffle-like beat.

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Languages of Africa

The languages of Africa are divided into six major language families.

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Languages of Mozambique

Mozambique is a multilingual country.

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Languages of Swaziland

Swaziland is home to several languages.

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Languages of the African Union

The languages of the African Union are languages used by citizens within the member states of the African Union (AU).

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Languages of Zambia

Zambia has several major indigenous languages, all of them members of the Bantu family.

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Languages of Zimbabwe

date). Zimbabwe has 16 official languages, namely Chewa, Chibarwe, English, Kalanga, Koisan, Nambya, Ndau, Ndebele, Shangani, Shona, sign language, Sotho, Tonga, Tswana, Venda, and Xhosa. Due to its history as both a British Colony and as the State of Rhodesia, English, Shona and Ndebele are the most widely spoken languages in the country. Approximately 70% of the population is Shona speaking and speaks Shona as their first language. Also it is said that around 20% are Ndebele and speak IsiNdebele as their first language. These statistics have not been officialised yet because Zimbabwe has never conducted a census that enumerated people according to languages.

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Larry Maluma

Larry Maluma is a Zambian reggae artist based in Australia.

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Leo "K'millian" Moyo

Leo Moyo (K'Millian) is a Zambian R&B Hip Hop Artist.

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Leroy Vail

Leroy Vail (August 5, 1940 – March 27, 1999) whose birth name was Hazen Leroy Vail was an American specialist in African studies and educator who specialised in the history and linguistics of Central Africa and later extended his interests to Southern Africa.

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Levi Zililo Mumba

Levi Zililo Mumba (died January 1945) was a leading local politician and the first President of the Nyasaland African Congress (NAC) during the period of British colonial rule in Nyasaland, which became the independent state of Malawi in 1964.

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Lisa Cheng (linguist)

Lisa Cheng (Lisa Lai-shen Cheng, 鄭禮珊 in traditional Chinese characters, 郑礼珊 in simplified Chinese characters) (born 1962) is a Chinese linguist with specialisation in theoretical syntax.

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List of acronyms: N

(Main list of acronyms).

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List of broadcasting languages by country

Foreign broadcasting is broadcasting with a foreign element.

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List of contemporary ethnic groups

The following is a list of contemporary ethnic groups.

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List of countries and dependencies and their capitals in native languages

The following chart lists countries and dependencies along with their capital cities, in English as well as any additional official language(s).

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List of ethnic groups of Africa

The ethnic groups of Africa number in the thousands, with each population generally having its own language (or dialect of a language) and culture.

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List of ISO 639-1 codes

ISO 639 is a standardized nomenclature used to classify languages.

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List of ISO 639-2 codes

ISO 639 is a set of international standards that lists short codes for language names.

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List of language names

This article is a resource of how to say the native name of most of the major languages in the world.

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List of languages by number of native speakers

This article ranks human languages by their number of native speakers.

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List of Latin-script alphabets

The tables below summarize and compare the letter inventory of some of the Latin-script alphabets.

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List of Latin-script letters

This is a list of letters of the Latin script.

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List of multilingual countries and regions

This is an incomplete list of areas with either multilingualism at the community level or at the personal level.

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List of newspapers in Malawi

This article is a list of newspapers in Malawi.

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List of official languages

This is a list of official languages of sovereign countries.

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List of official languages by country and territory

This is a complete list of the official languages of countries and dependent territories of the world.

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List of sovereign states and dependent territories in Africa

This is a list of sovereign states and dependent territories in Africa.

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List of Wikipedias

This is the list of the different language editions of Wikipedia; there are 301 Wikipedias of which 291 are active and 10 are not.

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List of Zambian names

This is a list of Zambian names, not including all the tribes of Zambia.

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Little Field Home

The Little Field Home is an orphanage in Chigamba Village, Malawi founded by Janet Littlefield.

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Liwonde National Park

Liwonde National Park, also known as Liwonde Wildlife Reserve, is a national park in southern Malawi, near the Mozambique border.

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Lomwe language

The Lomwe (Lowe) language, Elomwe, also known as Western Makua, is the fourth-largest language in Mozambique.

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Lusaka

Lusaka is the capital and largest city of Zambia.

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Malawi

Malawi (or; or maláwi), officially the Republic of Malawi, is a landlocked country in southeast Africa that was formerly known as Nyasaland.

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Malawi Congress Party

The Malawi Congress Party (MCP) is a political party in Malawi.

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Malawi Lomwe language

Malawi Lomwe, known as Elhomwe, is a dialect of the Lomwe language spoken in southeastern Malawi.

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Malawian Americans

Malawian Americans are Americans of Malawian descent.

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Malawian kwacha

The kwacha (ISO 4217: MWK, official name Malawi Kwacha) is the currency of Malawi as of 1971, replacing the Malawian pound.

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Malosa (Malawi)

Malosa is a small trading centre located in the Zomba District of Malawi.

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Mang'anja

The Mang'anja are a Bantu people of central and southern Africa, particularly around Chikwawa in the Shire River valley of southern Malawi.

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Maravi

Maravi was a kingdom which straddled the current borders of Malawi, Mozambique, and Zambia, in the 16th century.

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Martyn Cundy

Henry Martyn Cundy (23 December 1913 – 25 February 2005) was a mathematics teacher and professor in Britain and Malawi as well as a singer, musician and poet.

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Mchinji

Mchinji is a town and the capital of the Mchinji District in the Central Region of Malawi.

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Meeussen's rule

Meeussen’s rule is a special case of tone reduction in Bantu languages.

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Member states of the African Union

The member states of the African Union are the 55 sovereign states that have ratified or acceded to the Constitutive Act of the African Union to become member states to the African Union (AU).

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Michael Donnelly (priest)

Michael Thomas Donnelly (born June 4, 1927 — died 1982) was a Roman Catholic missionary priest from Belfast, Northern Ireland.

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Midlands Province

Midlands is a province of Zimbabwe.

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Mirror theory

In theoretical linguistics, mirror theory refers to a particular approach to the architecture of the language organ developed by Michael Brody, who claims his theory to be purely representational (unlike most of the current generative theories that are either derivational or combining derivation and representation).

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Misisi

Misisi Compound is a shanty town, which is located in Lusaka, Zambia.

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Miss Malawi

Miss Malawi is a national beauty pageant in Malawi.

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Missionary

A missionary is a member of a religious group sent into an area to proselytize and/or perform ministries of service, such as education, literacy, social justice, health care, and economic development.

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Mlanje Mountain chameleon

The Mlanje Mountain chameleon, Nadzikambia mlanjensis, is one of two species in the genus Nadzikambia (derived from the species' name in Chichewa).

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Mlonda

Mlonda (noun) is the Chichewa language word for watchman and may refer to.

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Mlungu dalitsani Malaŵi

"Mlungu dalitsani Malaŵi" is the national anthem of Malawi.

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Mokoomba

Mokoomba is a Zimbabwean musical group, originally from Chinotimba township, Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe.

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Mount Mabu chameleon

The Mount Mabu chameleon, Nadzikambia baylissi, is one of two species in the genus Nadzikambia (derived from the species' name in Chichewa).

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Mozambique

Mozambique, officially the Republic of Mozambique (Moçambique or República de Moçambique) is a country in Southeast Africa bordered by the Indian Ocean to the east, Tanzania to the north, Malawi and Zambia to the northwest, Zimbabwe to the west, and Swaziland and South Africa to the southwest.

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Mtendere Secondary School Thiwi

Mtendere Secondary School Thiwi is an all-male, boarding school in Thiwi village, Dedza District, Malawi.

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Mulungu

Mulungu (also spelled Murungu, Mlungu, and in other variantsFrankl (1990)) is a common name of the creator deity in a number of Bantu languages and cultures over East and Central Africa.

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MV Ilala

MV Ilala, formally Ilala II, is a motor ship that has plied Lake Malawi in East Africa since 1951.

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MV Mtendere

The MV Mtendere (Chichewa for 'peace') is a ferry, which used to serve passenger and cargo service on Lake Malawi.

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Mwangwego alphabet

The Mwangwego alphabet is an abugida developed for Malawian languages by Nolence Mwangwego.

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My Secret History

My Secret History is a novel by Paul Theroux published in June 1989 by Putnam Adult in the US and Hamish Hamilton in the UK.

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Mzungu

Mzungu is a Bantu language term used in the African Great Lakes region to refer to people of European descent.

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Nadzikambia

Currently, two species are placed in the recently established genus Nadzikambia (derived from the species' name in Chichewa).

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Nali Sauce

Nali Sauce is a popular sauce from Malawi dubbed, "'Africa's hottest peri-peri sauce'.

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Natives on Private Estates Ordinance 1928

Natives on Private Estates Ordinance, 1928 was a colonial ordinance passed by the Legislative council of the Nyasaland protectorate, now Malawi, (a body mainly of senior colonial officials, with a minority of nominated members representing European residents) to regulate the conditions under which African tenants who farmed land on estates owned by European settlers within that protectorate.

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Ndola

Ndola is the third largest city in Zambia, with a population of 475,194 (2010 census provisional).

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Netball in Malawi

Netball in Malawi is popular with women, with the Chichewa word for the game being "Nchembre mbaye".

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Ngoni language

Ngoni is a Bantu language of Zambia, Tanzania, Mozambique, and Malawi.

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Ngoni people

The Ngoni people are an ethnic group living in the present-day Southern African countries of Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zambia.

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Ngozi

Ngozi may refer to.

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Nguni people

The Nguni people are a group of Bantu peoples who primarily speak Nguni languages and currently reside predominantly in Southern Africa.

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Niassodon

Niassodon is an extinct genus of kingoriid dicynodont therapsid known from the Late Permian of Niassa Province, northern Mozambique.

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Nimbochromis

Nimbochromis is a small genus of haplochromine cichlids mostly endemic to Lake Malawi in East Africa.

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Nimbochromis polystigma

Nimbochromis polystigma is a species of cichlid endemic to Lake Malawi, in the Great Rift Valley system of Africa.

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Nkhata Bay

Nkhata Bay or just Nkhata is the capital of the Nkhata Bay District in Malawi.

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Nkhotakota

Nkhotakota (formerly Kota Kota) (name derived from the Chichewa for "Corner Corner") is a town and one of the districts in the Central Region of Malawi.

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Nkhotakota District

Nkhotakota is a district in the Central Region of Malawi.

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North-Eastern Rhodesia

North-Eastern Rhodesia was a British protectorate in south central Africa formed in 1900.

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Northern Rhodesia

Northern Rhodesia was a protectorate in south central Africa, formed in 1911 by amalgamating the two earlier protectorates of Barotziland-North-Western Rhodesia and North-Eastern Rhodesia.

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Nsanje District

Nsanje is a district in the Southern Region of Malawi.

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Nsenga language

Nsenga, also known as Senga, is a Bantu language of Zambia and Mozambique, occupying an area on the plateau that forms the watershed between the Zambezi and Luangwa river systems.

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Nsenga people

The Nsenga, not to be confused with the Senga, are a Bantu ethnic tribe of Zambia and Mozambique.

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NY

NY most commonly refers to.

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Nya

NYA or nya may refer to.

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Nyasa languages

The Nyasa languages are an apparently valid genealogical group of Bantu languages.

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Nyasa people

The Nyasa are a people of southeastern Africa, concentrated mainly in Malawi, southwestern Tanzania and parts of northern Mozambique.

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Nyasaland

Nyasaland, or the Nyasaland Protectorate, was a British Protectorate located in Africa, which was established in 1907 when the former British Central Africa Protectorate changed its name.

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Official languages of the United Nations

The official languages of the United Nations are the six languages that are used in UN meetings, and in which all official UN documents are written.

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Our Lady of Wisdom Cathedral, Blantyre

The Our Lady of Wisdom Cathedral or Cathedral Limbe Our Lady of Wisdom, also simply Cathedral of Blantyre, is the name given to a religious building belonging to the Catholic Church and is located in Blantyre the second largest city in the African country of Malawi, in the Southern region (Chakumwera).

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Outline of Zambia

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Zambia: Zambia – landlocked sovereign country located in Southern Africa.

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Pap (food)

Pap, also known as mieliepap (Afrikaans for maize porridge) in South Africa or Sadza in Shona or Isitshwala in Isindebele language in Zimbabwe, or Vhuswa in Tshivenda or bogobe in Northern Sotho, Sesotho and Setswana languages or Nsima Chewa in Malawi, or Nsima in Zambia, Ogi/ Akamu in Nigeria or phaletšhe in Botswana is a traditional porridge/polenta made from mielie-meal (coarsely ground maize) and a staple food of the Bantu peoples of Southern Africa (the Afrikaans word pap is taken from Dutch and simply means "porridge").

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Past tense

The past tense (abbreviated) is a grammatical tense whose principal function is to place an action or situation in past time.

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Peace pole

A Peace Pole is a monument that displays the message "May Peace Prevail on Earth” in the language of the country where it has been placed, and usually 3 to 13 additional translations.

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Philip Euen Mitchell

Sir Philip Euen Mitchell, (1 May 1890 – 11 October 1964) was a British Colonial administrator who served as Governor of Uganda (1935–1940), Governor of Fiji (1942–1944) and Governor of Kenya (1944–1952).

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Pitch-accent language

A pitch-accent language is a language that has word-accents—that is, where one syllable in a word or morpheme is more prominent than the others, but the accentuated syllable is indicated by a particular pitch contour (linguistic tones) rather than by stress.

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Plurale tantum

A plurale tantum (Latin for "plural only", plural form: pluralia tantum) is a noun that appears only in the plural form and does not have a singular variant for referring to a single object.

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Reduplication

Reduplication in linguistics is a morphological process in which the root or stem of a word (or part of it) or even the whole word is repeated exactly or with a slight change.

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Reformed Church in Zambia

The Reformed Church in Zambia is among the biggest Reformed churches in the country of Zambia.

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Reformed Church in Zimbabwe

The Reformed Church in Zimbabwe was founded by Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa missionaries in 1891.

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Reformed Church of Mozambique (Mphatso Synod)

The Reformed Church of Mozambique (Mphatso Synod) was founded in the 1990s.

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Regions of Malawi

Malawi is divided into 3 regions which comprise a combined total of 28 districts.

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Robert Earnshaw

Robert Earnshaw (born 6 April 1981) is a Welsh former international footballer who played as a forward.

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Sadza

Sadza in Shona (isitshwala in isiNdebele, or pap, vuswa or bogobe in South Africa, or nsima in Chichewa language, or Ugali in East Africa) or phaletšhe in Botswana, is a cooked maize meal that is the staple food in Zimbabwe and other parts of Southern Africa.

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Scout Motto

The Scout Motto of the Scout movement, in various languages, has been used by millions of Scouts around the world since 1907.

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Shadreck Chikoti

Shadreck Chikoti (born 7 October 1979) is a Malawian writer and social activist.

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Sotho verbs

Sesotho verbs are words in the language that signify the action or state of a substantive, and are brought into agreement with it using the subjectival concord.

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Spotted hyena

The spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta), also known as the laughing hyena, is a species of hyena, currently classed as the sole member of the genus Crocuta, native to Sub-Saharan Africa.

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St Peter's Roman Catholic Primary School, Aberdeen

St Peter's RC Primary School is a Catholic primary school in Aberdeen, Scotland that was established in 1833.

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Stand and Sing of Zambia, Proud and Free

"Stand and Sing of Zambia, Proud and Free" is the national anthem of Zambia.

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Sub-Saharan Africa

Sub-Saharan Africa is, geographically, the area of the continent of Africa that lies south of the Sahara.

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Sub-Saharan African music traditions

Sub-Saharan African music traditions exhibit so many common features that they may in some respects be thought of as constituting a single musical system.

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Subject–verb inversion in English

Subject–verb inversion in English is a type of inversion where the subject and verb (or chain of verbs, verb catena) switch their canonical order of appearance, so that the subject follows the verb(s), e.g. A lamp stood beside the bed → Beside the bed stood a lamp.

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Super VC-10 hap

The Super VC-10 hap (Placidochromis milomo) is a species of cichlid endemic to Lake Malawi along the Malawian shores of the lake.

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Thangata

"Thangata" is a word deriving from the Chewa language of Malawi which has changed its meaning several times, although all meanings relate to agriculture.

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The Big Issue Malawi

The Big Issue Malawi is a street paper in Malawi.

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The Nation (Malawi)

The Nation is a newspaper based in Blantyre, Malawi, owned by Nations Publications Limited.

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The Very Best

The Very Best is a collaboration between London-based DJ/production duo Radioclit and Esau Mwamwaya, a singer from Lilongwe, Malawi.

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These Girls Are Missing

These Girls Are Missing is a 1995 documentary film from directors Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini about the gender gap in education in Africa.

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Thomas Spurgeon Page

Sir Thomas Spurgeon Page CBE (19 October 1879 – 10 February 1958)Lorna E. Webb (1995) Chintali, Newton Publishers was a Northern Rhodesian politician who was a member of the Legislative Council and its first Speaker.

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Tonga language (Zambia and Zimbabwe)

Tonga (Chitonga), also known as Zambezi, is a Bantu language primarily spoken by the Tonga people who live mainly in the Southern and Western provinces of Zambia, and in northern Zimbabwe, with a few in Mozambique.

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Town Bemba

Town Bemba, also known as Bemba, is an innovative variety of Bemba spoken among migrant populations in central Zambia.

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Tujilane Chizumila

Tujilane Rose Chizumila (born 14 May 1953) is a Malawian lawyer and jurist who was appointed to the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights for a six-year term in 2017.

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Tumbuka language

The Tumbuka language is a Bantu language which is spoken in the Northern Region of Malawi and also in the Lundazi district of Zambia.

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Uapaca kirkiana

Uapaca kirkiana or sugar plum or mahobohobo is a species of plant in the Phyllanthaceae family.

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Ubuntu philosophy

Ubuntu is a Nguni Bantu term meaning "humanity".

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Whyghtone Kamthunzi

Whyghtone Kamthunzi (31 July 1956 - 18 May 2000) was a leading writer in the Chichewa language of Malawi in the 1980s and 1990s.

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William H. J. Rangeley

William H J Rangeley (1910-1958) was an officer in the colonial administration of Nyasaland and a scholar of the oral history and ethnography of the peoples of what is now Malawi.

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William Percival Johnson

William Percival Johnson (12 March 1854 in St Helens, Isle of Wight – October 1928 in Liuli, Tanganyika) was an Anglican missionary to Nyasaland.

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Willie Zingani

Willie T. Zingani (born 14 March 1954) is a Malawian novelist, poet, playwright and journalist.

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World Englishes

World Englishes is a term for emerging localized or indigenized varieties of English, especially varieties that have developed in territories influenced by the United Kingdom or the United States.

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Yao language

Yao is a Bantu language in Africa with approximately two million speakers in Malawi, and half a million each in Tanzania and Mozambique.

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Yao people (East Africa)

The Yao people, waYao, are a major Bantu ethnic and linguistic group based at the southern end of Lake Malawi, who played an important part in the history of Southeast Africa during the 19th century.

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Zambezi FM Radio

Zambezi Fm is a commercial radio station located in the tourist capital of Zambia Livingstone the station currently covers Livingstone, Kazungula, Zimba and parts of Kalomo, including parts of Western Zimbabwe, Eastern Botswana and Northern Namibia and is the only commercial radio station in Zambia that broadcasts to communities that live and work on the borders of these 4 neighbouring countries.

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Zambia

Zambia, officially the Republic of Zambia, is a landlocked country in south-central Africa, (although some sources prefer to consider it part of the region of east Africa) neighbouring the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the north, Tanzania to the north-east, Malawi to the east, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Botswana and Namibia to the south, and Angola to the west.

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Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation

The 'Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation' (ZNBC) is a Zambian state-owned television and radio station.

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Zambian Braille

Zambian Braille is any of several braille alphabets of Zambia.

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Zambian kwacha

The Kwacha (ISO 4217 code: ZMW) is the currency of Zambia.

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Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe, officially the Republic of Zimbabwe, is a landlocked country located in southern Africa, between the Zambezi and Limpopo Rivers, bordered by South Africa, Botswana, Zambia and Mozambique. The capital and largest city is Harare. A country of roughly million people, Zimbabwe has 16 official languages, with English, Shona, and Ndebele the most commonly used. Since the 11th century, present-day Zimbabwe has been the site of several organised states and kingdoms as well as a major route for migration and trade. The British South Africa Company of Cecil Rhodes first demarcated the present territory during the 1890s; it became the self-governing British colony of Southern Rhodesia in 1923. In 1965, the conservative white minority government unilaterally declared independence as Rhodesia. The state endured international isolation and a 15-year guerrilla war with black nationalist forces; this culminated in a peace agreement that established universal enfranchisement and de jure sovereignty as Zimbabwe in April 1980. Zimbabwe then joined the Commonwealth of Nations, from which it was suspended in 2002 for breaches of international law by its then government and from which it withdrew from in December 2003. It is a member of the United Nations, the Southern African Development Community (SADC), the African Union (AU), and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA). It was once known as the "Jewel of Africa" for its prosperity. Robert Mugabe became Prime Minister of Zimbabwe in 1980, when his ZANU-PF party won the elections following the end of white minority rule; he was the President of Zimbabwe from 1987 until his resignation in 2017. Under Mugabe's authoritarian regime, the state security apparatus dominated the country and was responsible for widespread human rights violations. Mugabe maintained the revolutionary socialist rhetoric of the Cold War era, blaming Zimbabwe's economic woes on conspiring Western capitalist countries. Contemporary African political leaders were reluctant to criticise Mugabe, who was burnished by his anti-imperialist credentials, though Archbishop Desmond Tutu called him "a cartoon figure of an archetypal African dictator". The country has been in economic decline since the 1990s, experiencing several crashes and hyperinflation along the way. On 15 November 2017, in the wake of over a year of protests against his government as well as Zimbabwe's rapidly declining economy, Mugabe was placed under house arrest by the country's national army in a coup d'état. On 19 November 2017, ZANU-PF sacked Robert Mugabe as party leader and appointed former Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa in his place. On 21 November 2017, Mugabe tendered his resignation prior to impeachment proceedings being completed.

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Zimbabwean Australians

Zimbabwean Australians are Australian citizens who are fully or partially of Zimbabwean descent or Zimbabwe-born people who reside in Australia.

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Zimbabwean jazz

Zimbabwean Jazz, also known as Afro Jazz was developed in the 20th century.

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Zimbabwean New Zealanders

Zimbabwean New Zealanders are New Zealand citizens who are fully or partially of Zimbabwean descent or Zimbabwe-born people who reside in New Zealand.

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Zodiak Broadcasting Station

Zodiak Broadcasting Station is a privately owned radio station in Malawi.

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Zomba District

Zomba District is one of twelve districts in the Southern Region of Malawi, surrounded by the Districts of Chiradzulu, Blantyre, Mulanje, Phalombe, Machinga, Balaka and the Republic of Mozambique to the east.

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Zomba Prison Project

Zomba Prison Project is a recording featuring music composed and performed by prisoners at the maximum-security Zomba Central Prison in Zomba, Malawi.

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Zone Fam

Zone Fam is a Zambian hip hop group based in Lusaka, composed of Sam Sakala, Jackson Banda, Reginald Lube, and previously Tim Chisenga until his departure from the group on April 1, 2015.The group was formed in 2009 after they were all signed to Slam Dunk Records.

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ZubaBox

A ZubaBox is a solar-powered internet café developed by Computer Aid International.

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2000 Zambian census

The 2000 Zambian census was conducted in Zambia in 2000 by DRS under approval of the Government of Zambia, which recorded demographic data from 13 million people and 4 million households.

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2010 Zambian census

The 2010 Zambian census was conducted in Zambia in 2010 under the approval of the Government of Zambia, which recorded demographic data from 13 million people and 3.2 million households.

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Redirects here:

Cewa dialect, Cewa language, Chewa dialect, Chewa phonology, Chewa-Nyanja language, Chichewa, Chichewa language, Chichewa phonology, Chichewa; Nyanja language, Chicheŵa, Chinyanja, Chinyanja language, Cinyanja, Cinyanja language, ISO 639:ny, ISO 639:nya, Manganja dialect, Manganja language, Nyanja, Nyanja dialect, Nyanja language, Nyasa dialect.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chewa_language

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