Introduction |
John: Welcome to 3-Minute Swahili Season 1, Lesson 10 - Asking How Much Something Costs. In this lesson, you’ll learn how to ask how much something costs in Swahili. |
Body |
John: Here's an informal way to ask for the price of something, literally meaning "Are you selling?" in Swahili. |
Medina: [Normal] Unauzaje? |
John: First is a phrase meaning "you sell." |
Medina: [Normal] unauza [Slow] unauza |
John: Next is the questions marker |
Medina: [Normal] je [Slow] je |
John: Note the rising intonation. Listen again to the informal question meaning "Are you selling?" |
Medina: [Slow] Unauzaje? [Normal] Unauzaje? |
John: Here's a neutral way to ask, "How much does this cost?" |
Medina: [Normal] Hii ni pesa ngapi? |
John: First is a word meaning "this." |
Medina: [Normal] hii [Slow] hii |
John: Next is the word meaning "is." |
Medina: [Normal] ni [Slow] ni |
John: Next is the word meaning "money." |
Medina: [Normal] pesa [Slow] pesa |
John: Last is the word meaning "how much." |
Medina: [Normal] ngapi [Slow] ngapi |
John: Note again the rising intonation. Listen again to the question meaning "How much does this cost?" |
Medina: [Slow] Hii ni pesa ngapi? [Normal] Hii ni pesa ngapi? |
John: Here's a response meaning "OK, I'll take it." |
Medina: [Normal] Sawa, nitaichukua. |
John: First is a word meaning "ok." |
Medina: [Normal] sawa [Slow] sawa |
John: Last is the word meaning "I'll take it." |
Medina: [Normal] nitaichukua [Slow] nitaichukua |
John: Listen again to the response, "OK, I'll take it." |
Medina: [Slow] Sawa, nitaichukua. [Normal] Sawa, nitaichukua. |
John: Here's a response meaning, "No, thank you. It's too expensive." |
Medina: [Normal] Hapana, asante. Ni ghali sana. |
John: First is a word meaning "no." |
Medina: [Normal] hapana [Slow] hapana |
John: Next is the word meaning "thanks." |
Medina: [Normal] asante [Slow] asante |
John: Next is the word meaning "is." |
Medina: [Normal] ni [Slow] ni |
John: Next is the word meaning "expensive." |
Medina: [Normal] ghali [Slow] ghali |
John: Last is the word meaning "very." |
Medina: [Normal] sana [Slow] sana |
John: Listen again to the response, "No, thank you. It's too expensive." |
Medina: [Slow] Hapana, asante. Ni ghali sana. [Normal] Hapana, asante. Ni ghali sana. |
Cultural Insight |
John: Now it's time for a quick cultural insight. |
Medina: Credit and debit cards are not commonly used in Kenya, but you can double-check by asking the following question—naweza lipa kwa kadi ya kredit? meaning "Can I pay by credit card?" |
Outro
|
John: And that’s all for this lesson. Don’t forget to check out the lesson notes, and we’ll see you in the next lesson! |
Medina: Tuonane! |
Comments
Hide