tula.ndex

Living in the light of God

New with Termwiki, pretty excited. I am Zimbabwean student, studying in China; working on a Masters ...
Intern

Zimbabwe

Industries:

tula.ndex hasn't chosen any Industries yet.

My native language:

English, UK (UE)

Other Languages:

Zulu (ZU)

  • zikhuphani tsotsi

    A Ndebele greeting. Direct translation: "what's going on thief?", but it is actually an informal greeting directed towards a friend not seen after a long time, meaning "Hello friend, how are you?"

    Language; Terminology
  • zithini

    A Ndebele greeting. Direct translation: "What are they saying?", meaning "Hello, how are things?" or "Hello, how is life going for you?"

    Language; Terminology
  • zithini

    A Ndebele greeting. Direct translation: "What are they saying?", meaning "Hello, how are things?" or "Hello, how is life going for you?"

    Language; Terminology
  • uthini

    A Ndebele greeting, directly translated to "What are you saying?", but means "Hello, how are you?"

    Language;
  • eitha

    In Ndebele it is pornounced: ay-ta. Accent is stressed on the last syllable. Used to mean "Hey!" or "Hello, how are you"

    Language; Slang
  • eitha

    Pornounced: ay-ta. Accent is stressed on the last syllable. Used to mean "Hey!" or "Hello, how are you"

    Language; Slang
  • ulomnyama

    Direct translation: You have(ulo) black(mnyama). Translated meaning: You have badluck If things are not going well, it is said "ulomnyama" example: Ngilomnyama - I'm (ngi) having a bad day.

    Language; Idioms
  • uvala ngebhetshu

    Direct translation: He covers(vala) with a loin cloth (bhetshu). This means to hide big problems with something small.

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