Swahili, known in the language itself as Kiswahili, uses a modified Latin alphabet that has been standardized since the early twentieth century. For English-speaking learners, this is one of the most encouraging facts about the language. Where Arabic learners must master an entirely new script and Chinese learners must memorize thousands of characters, Swahili learners can begin reading on day one. The letters are familiar. What must be learned is how those familiar letters sound in a Bantu phonological system rather than an English one.
Swahili is spoken as a first or second language by over 150 million people across East and Central Africa. It is the national and official language of Tanzania and Kenya, an official language of Uganda, Rwanda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and a working language of the African Union and the East African Community. It is the most widely spoken African language in the world and the lingua franca of a region that spans from the Indian Ocean coast to the Great Lakes.
This reference page covers the complete Swahili alphabet, the pronunciation of vowels and consonants, the digraphs and special letters (ng', ny, sh, ch, dh, th, gh), the consistent rule of penultimate stress, and the most common pronunciation errors made by native English speakers. By the end, you will be able to read any Swahili word aloud with accurate pronunciation, even words you have never seen before. Swahili orthography is phonemic: letters correspond consistently to sounds, and there are almost no silent letters or unpredictable spellings.
The Swahili Alphabet
The standard Swahili alphabet has 24 letters. The Latin letters Q and X are not used in native Swahili words. The letter C appears only in the digraph CH. The full alphabet is:
A, B, CH, D, DH, E, F, G, GH, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, NY, NG', O, P, R, S, SH, T, TH, U, V, W, Y, Z
Some of the entries above are digraphs (two letters representing one sound). The single letters, in standard order, are: A, B, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, R, S, T, U, V, W, Y, Z. The digraphs and special letters (CH, DH, GH, NY, NG', SH, TH) function as single sounds even though they are written with two characters and, in the case of NG', an apostrophe.
Memory aid: If you can pronounce the five vowels A E I O U purely (no diphthongs), and you can read every consonant as its plainest English value, you are already eighty percent of the way to Swahili pronunciation.
The Five Vowels
Swahili has exactly five vowels. Each has one stable, pure sound. Vowels never reduce to a schwa, and they never glide into diphthongs the way English vowels do. This consistency is a major reason Swahili is considered one of the easier African languages for foreign learners to pronounce.
| Letter | IPA | English Approximation | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | /a/ | Like "a" in father | baba | father |
| E | /e/ | Like "e" in bed, but purer | meza | table |
| I | /i/ | Like "ee" in see, but shorter | kiti | chair |
| O | /o/ | Like "o" in for, but purer | moto | fire |
| U | /u/ | Like "oo" in boot, but shorter | kulima | to cultivate |
The most important rule for English speakers: do not diphthongize. English "o" in "go" is actually /oʊ/, gliding from one vowel to another. Swahili "o" in "moto" is a single pure /o/ from beginning to end. Likewise English "a" in "day" is /eɪ/, but Swahili "e" is pure /e/.
When two vowels appear next to each other, each is pronounced separately. There are no silent vowels. The word "saa" (hour, clock, watch) is pronounced "sa-a" with two distinct A sounds. "Kiu" (thirst) is "ki-u" with two syllables. "Eua" (to purify) has three distinct vowels: e-u-a.
Consonants That Match English
Most Swahili consonants correspond closely to their English equivalents.
| Letter | Sound | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| B | /b/ | baba | father |
| D | /d/ | dada | sister |
| F | /f/ | fahamu | to understand |
| H | /h/ | habari | news |
| J | /dʒ/ | jina | name |
| K | /k/ | kitabu | book |
| L | /l/ | lugha | language |
| M | /m/ | maji | water |
| N | /n/ | nani | who |
| P | /p/ | pesa | money |
| S | /s/ | sasa | now |
| T | /t/ | taa | lamp |
| V | /v/ | vitabu | books |
| W | /w/ | watu | people |
| Y | /j/ | yai | egg |
| Z | /z/ | zawadi | gift |
One subtle difference: Swahili B, D, G, and P are less aspirated than their English counterparts. English P in "pot" releases a puff of air; Swahili P in "pesa" does not. This is rarely a barrier to understanding but contributes to a more authentic accent.
R in Swahili is a light tap or flap, similar to the R in Spanish "pero" or the American English T in "water." It is never the English retroflex R of "red."
The Digraphs and Special Letters
These combinations represent single sounds and must be learned as units.
CH
CH represents the voiceless postalveolar affricate /tʃ/, the same sound as in English "church." The plain letter C never appears alone in Swahili; it always occurs as CH.
- chai (tea)
- chakula (food)
- choo (toilet)
SH
SH represents /ʃ/, the same sound as in English "ship."
- shule (school)
- shamba (farm, field)
- shangazi (paternal aunt)
NY
NY represents the palatal nasal /ɲ/, similar to Spanish Ñ in "año" or the NI in English "onion." It is a single sound, not N followed by Y.
- nyumba (house)
- nyama (meat)
- nyota (star)
NG'
NG' (with an apostrophe) represents the velar nasal /ŋ/, the NG sound at the end of English "sing." The apostrophe is essential: it distinguishes NG' (one sound) from NG (two sounds, as in "finger"). Many English speakers omit the apostrophe when typing; this changes the pronunciation and can change the meaning.
- ng'ombe (cow)
- ng'ambo (other side, abroad)
- ng'aa (to shine)
The word "ng'ombe" begins with the same nasal sound that ends "sing," not with a hard G.
NG (without apostrophe)
NG without an apostrophe is /ŋg/, the same sound as in English "finger" or "anger." Both consonants are pronounced.
- ngoma (drum, dance)
- ngumu (hard, difficult)
Key distinction: ng'ombe (cow) begins with /ŋ/; ngoma (drum) begins with /ŋg/. The apostrophe is the only written clue. Native speakers hear this difference clearly.
DH, TH, GH
These three digraphs appear primarily in Arabic loanwords. Many rural speakers simplify them to D, Z, and G respectively, but standard Swahili preserves the distinct sounds.
| Digraph | Sound | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| DH | /ð/ like English "th" in "this" | dhambi | sin |
| TH | /θ/ like English "th" in "think" | thelathini | thirty |
| GH | /ɣ/ voiced velar fricative, like a soft French R | ghali | expensive |
Stress: The Penultimate Rule
Swahili stress is remarkably regular. The stress almost always falls on the penultimate (second-to-last) syllable of a word. This rule has almost no exceptions in native vocabulary and only a few exceptions in recent loanwords.
| Word | Syllables | Stress | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| kitabu | ki-TA-bu | TA | book |
| Kiswahili | ki-swa-HI-li | HI | Swahili language |
| shule | SHU-le | SHU | school |
| habari | ha-BA-ri | BA | news |
| nyumba | NYUM-ba | NYUM | house |
| karibu | ka-RI-bu | RI | welcome, near |
| asubuhi | a-su-BU-hi | BU | morning |
When a suffix is added to a word, the stress shifts because the penultimate syllable has moved. This is one of the more elegant properties of Swahili phonology and a clue that Swahili is a suffixing, agglutinative language at its core.
- kitabu (KI-TA-bu) - book
- kitabuni (ki-ta-BU-ni) - in the book
The stress in "kitabu" is on "ta," but when "-ni" is added for "in the book," the stress shifts to "bu" because "bu" is now the second-to-last syllable.
Syllable Structure
Swahili syllables are almost always open - that is, they end in a vowel, not a consonant. This gives the language its characteristic rhythmic, melodic quality. Words tend to end in vowels, and consonant clusters within a syllable are rare.
Common syllable patterns:
- V (vowel alone): a, e, i, o, u
- CV (consonant + vowel): ba, ki, mo, tu
- CCV (consonant + consonant + vowel): mba, nta, nde
The M that begins many Swahili words (as in "mtu," meaning "person") deserves special attention. Here M is not a separate syllable but rather a syllabic M that precedes the following consonant. The word "mtu" is pronounced with a slight hum on the M followed immediately by "tu," giving the effect of a one-and-a-half-syllable word. "Mtoto" (child) is pronounced "m-TO-to."
Similarly, N at the start of words like "nchi" (country) is syllabic. The N hums briefly before the following consonant.
Common Mistakes English Speakers Make
1. Diphthongizing the vowels. English speakers tend to pronounce Swahili O as "oh" (which is really /oʊ/) and Swahili E as "ay" (/eɪ/). The result is a noticeable accent. The fix is to practice holding each vowel pure from beginning to end. Say "boat" with a stretched single O and you approach Swahili "boti."
2. Ignoring the apostrophe in NG'. Pronouncing "ng'ombe" (cow) as "n-gombe" instead of /ŋombe/ marks the speaker as foreign immediately. Practice the /ŋ/ sound by saying "singer" and isolating just the final nasal sound.
3. Stressing the wrong syllable in long words. English has unpredictable stress, and English speakers often guess. Swahili stress is regular: second-to-last syllable, every time. "Hakuna matata" is ha-KU-na ma-TA-ta, not HA-kuna MA-tata.
4. Aspirating stops. English P, T, K are strongly aspirated (a puff of air follows). Swahili P, T, K are unaspirated. Holding a tissue in front of your mouth can help you notice and reduce the puff of air.
5. Converting R to an English retroflex. Swahili R should be tapped against the alveolar ridge, never curled back as in American English "red." Practice the tap by saying American English "butter" or "water" and noting what your tongue does on the T.
Quick Reference
| Category | Key Points |
|---|---|
| Alphabet | 24 letters plus digraphs CH, SH, NY, NG', DH, TH, GH |
| Not used | Q, X (and C only in CH) |
| Vowels | A E I O U - always pure, never diphthongized |
| Stress | Penultimate syllable, with very few exceptions |
| Syllables | Usually open (end in vowel) |
| NG' vs NG | NG' is one sound /ŋ/; NG is two sounds /ŋg/ |
| R | A light tap, never English retroflex |
| Pronunciation difficulty | Low - phonemic spelling, few unusual sounds |
FAQ
Is Swahili hard to pronounce for English speakers?
Comparatively, no. Swahili has five pure vowels, no tones, no heavy consonant clusters, and a regular penultimate stress rule. The only truly new sounds are NY and NG', both of which exist in English as parts of other words (onion, singing). Pronunciation is usually the easiest part of Swahili for English speakers - the challenge is the grammar.
Are tones used in Swahili?
No. Unlike most other Bantu languages, Swahili has lost the tone system of its ancestors. Modern Swahili uses stress accent, not tone. This makes pronunciation significantly simpler than for languages such as Zulu or Shona.
How do I pronounce NG' correctly?
Say the word "singer" in English. Isolate the final "ng" sound - not the G, just the nasal hum. That is the Swahili NG'. Put that sound at the beginning of a syllable and you can pronounce "ng'ombe" and "ng'ambo."
Why do some Swahili words begin with M or N followed by a consonant?
These are noun class prefixes. The M in "mtu" marks the M-/Wa- class for humans. The M or N functions as a syllabic consonant and is pronounced with a brief hum. See the page on noun classes for full details.
Do accent marks appear in Swahili?
No. Standard Swahili orthography uses no accents, umlauts, or tone marks. The only non-alphabetic mark is the apostrophe in NG', which is a required part of that digraph and not an accent.
Is there a difference between Kenyan and Tanzanian Swahili pronunciation?
There are minor differences. Tanzanian Swahili is considered closer to the standard (Kiunguja of Zanzibar) and tends to preserve the Arabic loan sounds DH, TH, GH more carefully. Kenyan Swahili often simplifies these to Z, S, and G. See the page on dialects for more detail.
Does Swahili have silent letters?
Essentially no. Every letter is pronounced. The only complication is the digraphs, where two letters together represent one sound, but neither letter is silent - they work together as a single unit.
See Also
- Swahili Noun Classes: Complete System Reference
- Swahili Verb Conjugation and Tense Markers
- Swahili Greetings and Daily Phrases
- Swahili Arabic Loanwords and Vocabulary
- Swahili Dialects and Regional Variations
- Writing Systems and Alphabets Compared
- Pronunciation and Phonology Compared for English Speakers
- Language Difficulty for English Speakers
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Swahili hard to pronounce for English speakers?
Comparatively no. Swahili has five pure vowels, no tones, no heavy consonant clusters, and a regular penultimate stress rule. The only truly new sounds are NY and NG', both of which exist as parts of English words such as onion and singing. Pronunciation is usually the easiest part of Swahili for English speakers; grammar is the real challenge.
Are tones used in Swahili?
No. Unlike most Bantu languages, Swahili has lost the tone system of its ancestors and now uses only stress accent. This makes Swahili pronunciation much simpler than that of tone languages such as Zulu or Shona.
How do I pronounce NG' correctly?
Say the English word singer and isolate the final nasal sound - not the G, just the hum. That sound placed at the start of a syllable gives you the Swahili NG', as in ng'ombe (cow) and ng'ambo (other side).
Why do some Swahili words begin with M or N followed by a consonant?
These are noun class prefixes. The M in mtu (person) marks the M-/Wa- human class. The leading M or N is a syllabic consonant pronounced as a brief hum before the next consonant, not a separate full syllable.
Does Swahili use accent marks?
No. Standard Swahili orthography uses no accents, umlauts, or tone marks. The only non-alphabetic mark is the apostrophe in NG', which is a required part of the digraph, not an accent.
Is there a difference between Kenyan and Tanzanian Swahili pronunciation?
There are minor differences. Tanzanian Swahili follows the Kiunguja standard of Zanzibar more closely and preserves Arabic loan sounds such as DH, TH, and GH. Kenyan Swahili often simplifies these to Z, S, and G in everyday speech.
Does Swahili have silent letters?
Essentially no. Every letter is pronounced. The digraphs CH, SH, NY, NG', DH, TH, and GH represent single sounds, but both letters in each digraph contribute to that sound; neither is silent.






