Origin Of Swahili Language
The Swahili language, is basically
of Bantu (African) origin. It has borrowed words from other
languages such as Arabic probably as a result of the Swahili people
using the Quran written in Arabic for spiritual guidance as Muslims.
As regards the formation of the
Swahili culture and language, some scholars attribute these phenomena to
the intercourse of African and Asiatic people on the coast of East
Africa. The word "Swahili" was used by early Arab visitors to the
coast and it means "the coast". Ultimately it came to be applied to the
people and the language.
Regarding the history of the Swahili
language, the older view linked to the colonial time asserts that
the Swahili language originates from Arabs and Persians who moved to
the East African coast. Given the fact that only the vocabulary can
be associated with these groups but the syntax or grammar of the
language is Bantu, this argument has been almost forgotten. It is well
known that any language that has to grow and expand its territories
ought to absorb some vocabulary from other languages in its way.
A suggestion has been made that
Swahili is an old language. The earliest known document recounting
the past situation on the East African coast written in the 2nd
century AD (in Greek language by anonymous author at Alexandria in
Egypt and it is called the Periplus of Erythrean Sea) says that
merchants visiting the East African coast at that time from Southern
Arabia, used to speak with the natives in their local language and they
intermarried with them. Those that suggest that Swahili is an old
language point to this early source for the possible antiquity of the
Swahili language.
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