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Or am I the only one? :P

2006-07-19 13:05:58 · 2 answers · asked by Justin S 1 in Society & Culture Languages

2 answers

Really? I don't speak Kiswahili, but I came across a name I liked on a baby names website: "Ayanna". According to the site, it means "beautiful flower" in Kiswahili. Is that true?

Sorry to answer your question with another question, but you speak Kiswahili, so I thought I'd ask. You know, sometimes the info that those sites provide isn't really accurate. Thanks.

2006-07-19 16:08:19 · answer #1 · answered by thecatphotographer 5 · 0 0

it turned right into a valid question till you said a 'deficiency'. i does no longer call it a deficiency yet i does no longer call it english. it is inner city. i comprehend many black those who do not talk that way. one is a realtor, one is a instructor and the different is a imperative. the realtor is sluggish to anger and very stylish. the others will turn on a dime. they bypass from very pleasant to street thug. i noted it ensue on the flavour flav reunion. the host of the coach regarded state-of-the-artwork (for a coach like that) till she changed into stuck interior the midst of a catfight. then the gloves got here off. i see it extra as a lack of administration rather than a skill component.

2016-10-14 23:37:04 · answer #2 · answered by muniz 4 · 0 0

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