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Benedicto Wokomaatani [a] Malunga (born in 1962 [1]), also known as Ben Malunga, is a Malawian poet, writing in the Chichewa language. He is also a short-story writer, an essayist, a music composer, public speaker, and translator who has translated Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart into Chichewa under the title Chipasupasu.
Chichewa (also but less commonly known as Chinyanja, Chewa or Nyanja) is the main lingua franca of central and southern Malawi and neighbouring regions. Like other Bantu languages it has a wide range of tenses. In terms of time, Chichewa tenses can be divided into present, recent past, remote past, near future, and remote future. The dividing ...
Another grammar including Chichewa tones was a handbook written for Peace Corps Volunteers, Stevick et al., Chinyanja Basic Course (1965), which gives very detailed information on the tones of sentences, and also indicates intonations. [18] Its successor, Scotton and Orr (1980) Learning Chichewa, [19] is much less detailed. All three of these ...
Pilar Adón - translator from English into Spanish; Jorge Luis Borges – translator of many English, French, and German works into Spanish; Margarita Diez-Colunje y Pombo (1838–1919) – translator from French into Spanish; Xenia Dyakonova – translator from Russian into Spanish; Javier Marías – translator of many English works into Spanish
Chewa (also known as Nyanja, / ˈ n j æ n dʒ ə /) is a Bantu language spoken in Malawi and a recognised minority in Zambia and Mozambique.The noun class prefix chi-is used for languages, [4] so the language is usually called Chichewa and Chinyanja.
The Chichewa, in Zambia still called the more neutral Chinyanja, Bible was translated by William Percival Johnson in 1912. This older version is bound as Buku Lopatulika. The Bible Society of Malawi records that the Buku Lopatulika translation was first published in 1922, revised in 1936 and 19
The original ChiChewa version of Nthondo was published in 1933, and in the following year an English translation appeared with the title, Man of Africa. The English translation was undertaken by Thomas Cullen Young , a missionary who promoted the work of a number of local writers, and featured a foreword by Julian Huxley .
A distinctive feature of Welsh English is the rising pitch on the last syllable of major words, imitating the rising pitch of word-final syllables in Welsh (see below). An important factor in the realisation of stress in both Welsh and Welsh English is the length of the post-stress consonant, which tends to be longer than the stressed vowel itself.