Presentation about Tanzania in the Continent of Africa 2:Akatupa, jembe upande LANGUAGE - LUGHA Akaenda mjini Kanunua gari sasa yeye ni tajiri %chorus% Swahili is the national language. Swahili and What a luck, what a blessing, what a English are used as language of instructions in luck Grades 6 and above. For the person with a farm. Greetings: 1:A farmer dug in the farm He/she plated potatoes John: Hu jambo, Cleven? (How are you, He/she dug and dug, Alas! He/she got a Cleven?) diamond Cleven: Sijambo, John! (I’m fine, John) John: Habari gani? (What is the news?) 2:He/she threw his hoe aside Cleven: Nzuri sana. (All is well.) Went to town and bought a vehicle Now he/she is a rich person. Swahili song, about bee that is busy making us some honey! 1 MOJA 2 MBILI %Chorus% 3 TATU Sum, sum, sum. Nyuki lia we! 4 NNE 5 TANO 1.Toka mbali kutafuta ua zuri kwa chakula. 6 SITA 2.Ukiona ua moja, lete tu asali tamu. 7 SABA 3.Ukileta nyingi sana, tutaweza kupatana. 8 NANE 4.Ukimwuma mtu sana, donda litaonekana 9 TISA 10 KUMI %Chorus% 11 KUMI NA MOJA Zoom zoom zoom. bee buzz by! 20 ISHIRINI 1.From far distance, good flower for food. 30 THELATHINI 2.If you find only one, still bring delicious 40 AROBAINI honey 50 HAMSINI 3.If you bring a lot, we might be friends 60 SITINI 4.If you sting a person, the scar will appear 70 SABINI 80 THEMANINI 90 TISINI Swahili song, whose musical notes are like the 100 MIA MOJA song “Yankee Doodle” RAFIKI FRIEND TWIGA GIRAFFE %Chorus% KWAHERI BYE BYE Loo bahati, Loo bahati, Loo bahati BAADAE SEE YOU LATER Ya mtu mwenye shamba. NJOO COME TAFADHALI PLEASE 1:Bwana shamba, kalima shamba HUJAMBO HOW ARE YOU? Akapanda viazi SIJAMBO I’M FINE akachimba chimba akaona Lo! Alamsi! http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~cmmari/welcome
Presentation about Tanzania in the Continent of Africa MARK MMARI’s trip from Tanzania to Portland, OR summer of 1999. http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~cmmari/welcome
Presentation about Tanzania in the Continent of Africa FOOD - CHAKULA Banana - N D I _ _ Coffee - K A H A _ _ Fruits and vergetables Goat (Ceremonial food, like Turkey) M A T U _ _ _ na M B O _ _ M B U _ _ Potatoes, bananas and meat(Goat) Pawpaw and banana trees VIAZI, NDIZI na NYAMA(mbuzi) miti ya MAPAPAI na NDIZI http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~cmmari/welcome
Presentation about Tanzania in the Continent of Africa FOOD - CHAKULA Dried beans from the farm. After harvest, we put My village grow lots of banana. Almost all the dried beans on the gropund and hit them with houses are surrounded by banana, coffee and sticks to remove the beans from the stems. We other big trees. The buck of banana tree is used then sell some in the market and keep some for as a roofing material. When raining, the banana food. leaf can be a good umbrella. We cook bananas like you make mash potates, or fry them. We also make juice and beer from banana. Banana is our staple food. In the ever-shrinking world, you will find BK-lie My BIBI (grandmother) peeling fresh beans from fast food in big cities in Tanzania. The same the farm. They are yummy! My grannd ma was way you will find Safari-like game in Oregon. about 107 years old. She passed on April 2000 at the age of 110. She still worked to almost her last month. http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~cmmari/welcome
Presentation about Tanzania in the Continent of Africa FAMILY - FAMILIA Brother, Mother and Father Second Cousin K A _ _ ,M A _ _ na B A _ _ B I N A _ _ MTO_ _ (Mark), Mama Brother and truck (Lucy) K A _ _ na G A _ _ Child (Baraka), Wife (April) and Child (Mark) Niece (Brian), Child (Mark), Sister- MTO__ (Baraka), Mke (April) na InLaw (Philipina) MTO__ (mark) Binamu, Mtoto na Shemeji http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~cmmari/welcome
Presentation about Tanzania in the Continent of Africa FAMILY - FAMILIA M T O T O (Mark) na B A B A (Cleven) Grandson (Mark) and Grandmother Son and father (Elishiisa) MJUKUU(Mark) na BIBI (Elishiisa) Children W A T O _ _ (Mark & Baraka) http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~cmmari/welcome
Presentation about Tanzania in the Continent of Africa HOUSE - NYUMBA A rare treat! Kilimanjaro is usually SOME VILLAGE HOUSE shrouded in the clouds. Once in a while, made from: logs, tree twigs nailed you can see the peak from my village. horizonatally on the logs, plastered with We grow corn, sunflower, beans and clay soil. The roof is either corrugated- other short-term crops. iron sheet or banana tree bucks! My Parent’s house. Closer look for roofing, doors and windows. Chagga people (my ethnic My parent’s HOUSE in the village. group) are more agriculturist. Hence we build Made from:cement and sand block and roofed more permanet houses. Maasai, our with corrugated-iron sheets. Some people use neighbouring group, moves around with their clay-tiles for roof. It is 4 bedroom home. The animals in search of pastures. So they build water doesn’t run in the house, but there is a tempoarary houses from clay, cow dung, grass water faucet in the backyard, kitchen and toilet. and tree twigs. CITY building. This is Dar-Es-Salaam, Dar-Es-Salaam in a port city. The port is in Tanzania’s commercial capital. It is a very busy Indian ocean. It is very hot and humid in sum- city, with over 6million people. Compare with mer. Visit during cooler time. 2.7 M in Oregon. http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~cmmari/welcome
Presentation about Tanzania in the Continent of Africa ANIMALS - WANYAMA Elephant Lion T E M _ _ S I M _ _ * Lawate, my village, is in the slopes of Mt. Cougar Kilimanjaro (19,340ft). In 1999, I took a 5-day trip to hike it. The ice at the top is spectacular. My village is down there..... The glacier wall at the top of Kilimanjaro. I was The snow at the top of Kilimanjaro is wonderful. too tired to take many photos. My village is I hope countriues f the world will adopt measure sandwiched between Kilimanjaro and Mt. Meru to reverse global warming. If not, in a mere 14 (14,780ft). years the ice here will be gone. http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~cmmari/welcome
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