Dialogue

Vocabulary (Review)

Learn New Words FAST with this Lesson’s Vocab Review List

Get this lesson’s key vocab, their translations and pronunciations. Sign up for your Free Lifetime Account Now and get 7 Days of Premium Access including this feature.

Or sign up using Facebook
Already a Member?

Lesson Notes

Unlock In-Depth Explanations & Exclusive Takeaways with Printable Lesson Notes

Unlock Lesson Notes and Transcripts for every single lesson. Sign Up for a Free Lifetime Account and Get 7 Days of Premium Access.

Or sign up using Facebook
Already a Member?

Lesson Transcript

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