释义 |
Definition of Luganda in English: Lugandanoun luːˈɡandə-ˈɡan- mass nounThe Bantu language of the Baganda people, widely used in Uganda and having over 2 million speakers. 卢干达语(巴干达人操的班图语,在乌干达广泛使用,有200多万使用者) Example sentencesExamples - Tone in Luganda is of cardinal phonemic importance, which is probably a general characteristic of most present-day Bantu languages.
- The most common are translations from Luganda to English and translations from English to Luganda.
- A surviving testimony to the scale and grandeur of Buganda's royal architecture and the most revered shrine in the kingdom, the tomb displays on multiple levels what in Luganda is called kutimba.
- The Eastern Lacustrine Bantu speakers include the Baganda people whose language is Luganda, the Basoga, and many smaller societies in Uganda, Tanzania, and Kenya.
- According to Jean she will hear the words ‘Weybale Nnu’ which means ‘thank you very much’ in the local dialect of Luganda and this will apply to all of the people who help the project.
- One man shouted to Peter, for the crowd, in Luganda, ‘She's going to give you AIDS.’
- Deo spoke to us in Luganda, but not to Peter, of course.
OriginCompare with Baganda, Ganda, Muganda. Definition of Luganda in US English: Lugandanoun-ˈɡan- The Bantu language of the Baganda people, widely used in Uganda and having over 2 million speakers. 卢干达语(巴干达人操的班图语,在乌干达广泛使用,有200多万使用者) Example sentencesExamples - The most common are translations from Luganda to English and translations from English to Luganda.
- One man shouted to Peter, for the crowd, in Luganda, ‘She's going to give you AIDS.’
- The Eastern Lacustrine Bantu speakers include the Baganda people whose language is Luganda, the Basoga, and many smaller societies in Uganda, Tanzania, and Kenya.
- A surviving testimony to the scale and grandeur of Buganda's royal architecture and the most revered shrine in the kingdom, the tomb displays on multiple levels what in Luganda is called kutimba.
- According to Jean she will hear the words ‘Weybale Nnu’ which means ‘thank you very much’ in the local dialect of Luganda and this will apply to all of the people who help the project.
- Deo spoke to us in Luganda, but not to Peter, of course.
- Tone in Luganda is of cardinal phonemic importance, which is probably a general characteristic of most present-day Bantu languages.
OriginCompare with Baganda, Ganda, Muganda. |