English words of African origin

Facet of English etymology From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following list names English words that originate from African languages.

  • okapi – from a language in the Congo
  • okra – from Igbo ókùrù
  • orisha – from Yoruba, "deity"
  • Osu – from Igbo, traditional caste system
  • oyinbo – from Yoruba, "skinless" or "peeled skin"
  • safari – from Swahili travel, ultimately from Arabic
  • samboFula sambo meaning "uncle"
  • sangoma – from Zulu – "traditional healer" (often used in South African English)
  • shea – A tree and the oil Shea butter which comes from its seeds, comes from its name in Bambara
  • tango – probably from Ibibio tamgu
  • tilapia – possibly a Latinization of "tlhapi", the Tswana word for "fish"[14]
  • tsetse – from a Bantu language (Tswana tsetse, Luhya tsiisi)
  • ubuntuNguni term for "mankind, humanity", in South Africa since the 1980s also used capitalized, Ubuntu, as the name of a philosophy or ideology of "human kindness" or "humanism"
  • uhuru – from Swahili, "freedom".
  • Ujamaa – from Swahili, "fraternity". Socialist policies of Tanzanian president Julius Nyerere.
  • vodou – from West African languages (Ewe and Fon vodu "spirit")[15]
  • vuvuzela – musical instrument, name of Zulu or Nguni origin
  • yam – West African (Fula nyami, Twi anyinam)
  • zebra – of unknown origin, recorded since c. 1600, from Portuguese ‘ezebro’, used of an Iberian animal, in turn possibly ultimately from Latin ‘equiferus’, but a Congolese language, or alternatively Amharic have been put forward as possible origins[16]
  • zimbabwe – from Shona, "house of stones" or "venerated houses"
  • zombie – likely from West African (compare Kikongo zumbi "fetish", but alternatively derived from Spanish sombra "shade, ghost"[17]

References

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