This is a list of English language words that come from the Niger-Congo languages. It excludes placenames except where they have become common words.
Bantu origin
- banjo â probably Bantu mbanza
- basenji â breed of dog from the Congo
- boma â probably from Swahili
- â from Swahili, meaning an important person or safari leader
- chimpanzee â loaned in the 18th century from a Bantu language, possibly Kivili ci-mpenzi.
- dengue â possibly from Swahili dinga
- goober â possibly from Bantu (Kikongo and Kimbundu nguba)
- gilo - from Kimbundu njilu, via Portuguese jiló
- gumbo â from Bantu (Kimbundu ingombo, plural of kingombo, meaning "okra")
- impala â from Zulu im-pala
- impi â from Zulu language meaning war, battle or a regiment
- indaba â from Xhosa or Zulu languages â 'stories' or 'news' typically conflated with 'meeting' (often used in South African English)
- isango â Zulu meaning gateway
- jumbo â from Swahili (jambo or jumbe or from Kongo nzamba "elephant")
- kalimba
- Kwanzaa â recent coinage (Maulana Karenga 1965) as the name of a "specifically African-American holiday", abstracted from a Swahili phrase matunda ya kwanza, meaning " fruits [of the harvest]".
- lapa â from Sotho languages â enclosure or barbecue area (often used in South African English)
- macaque â from Bantu makaku through Portuguese and French
- mamba â from Zulu or Swahili mamba
- marimba â from Bantu (Kimbundu and Swahili marimba, malimba)
- okapi â from a language in the Congo
- safari â from Swahili travel, ultimately from Arabic
- sangoma â from Zulu â traditional healer (often used in South African English)
- tilapia â Possibly a latinization "thiape", the Tswana word for fish.
- tsetse â from a Bantu language (Tswana tsetse, Luhya ')
- â Nguni 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".
- vuvuzela â musical instrument, name of Zulu or Nguni origin
- zebra â of unknown origin, recorded since c. 1600, possibly from a Congolese language, or alternatively from Amharic.
- zombie â likely from West African (compare Kikongo zumbi "fetish", Kimbundu nzambi "god")
Non-Bantu West African origin
- azawakh - probably from Fula or Tuareg. A breed of dogs from West and North Africa
- banana â West African, possibly Wolof banana
- bongo â West African boungu
- buckra â "white man or person", from Efik and Ibibio mbakara
- chigger â possibly from Wolof and/or Yoruba jiga "insect"
- cola â from West African languages (Temne kola, Mandinka kolo)
- djembe â from West African languages
- jazz â from West African languages (Mandinka jasi, Temne yas)
- jive â possibly from Wolof jev
- juke, jukebox â possibly from Wolof and Bambara ' through Gullah
- kwashiorkor â from Ga language, Coastal Ghana meaning "swollen stomach"
- MarÃÂmbula, plucked musical instrument (lamellophone) of the Caribbean islands
- merengue (dance) possibly from Fulani meaning to shake or quiver
- mumbo jumbo â from Mandingo name Maamajombo, a masked dancer
- mojo â from Kongo âÂÂmoyoâ meaning âÂÂspiritâÂÂ
- obeah â from West African (Efik ubio, Twi ebayifo)
- okra â from Igbo ókùrù
- sambo â Fula sambo meaning "uncle"
- tango â probably from Ibibio '
- tote â West African via Gullah
- vodou â from West African languages (Ewe and Fon vodu "spirit")
- yam â West African (Fula nyami, Twi anyinam)
References
Notes
Sources