Dialogue

Vocabulary

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Gabriella: Hi everyone. Gabriella here, and welcome back to SwahiliPod101.com. This is Basic Bootcamp Lesson 5 - Counting from 100-1,000,000 in Swahili. This is the 5th in a 5-part series that will help you ease your way into Swahili.
Medina: Helo, Mimi ni Medina. I’m Medina.
Gabriella: In this lesson, we'll continue with more of the essentials of Swahili numbers. But this time, we'll venture into higher number territory - the numbers over 100 all the way to 1 million.
Medina: You’ll be listening to two people at an auction.
Gabriella: That’s right! They’ll be bidding on an ancient Kenyan vase. Let’s listen to the conversation!
POST CONVERSATION BANTER
Gabriella: Now, you'll usually see these higher numbers when you’re talking about money. Medina, what can you tell us about prices and currency in Kenya?
Medina: We'll use the current Kenyan shillings exchange rate, where 1 US dollar is roughly equivalent to 87 Kenyan shillings. And prices in Kenya do vary a lot. It depends where you are, and what you eat.
Gabriella: Ok, what's the price of an average meal in Nairobi?
Medina: Well, Nairobi is not the cheapest city in Kenya, especially in the tourist spots. But, of course, you can get a full meal for about 500 to 1000 Kenyan shillings.
Gabriella: Which is roughly 6 to 15 US dollars. What about a very nice meal?
Medina: Oh, the price will jump up to above 2000 Kenyan shillings.
Gabriella: that's about 20 US Dollars! I bet the food is really good there too.
Medina: The most expensive food is usually some exotic Kenyan, Mediterranean, French, or Italian cuisine.
Gabriella: I don't think our listeners will go to Kenya to try French food, but Exotic Kenyan food does sound interesting.
Medina: And for an average Kenyan meal, or my absolute favorite, pilau nyama - which is [Spicy rice with meat] by the way, - about 10 US dollars should be enough.
Gabriella: Okay, now onto the vocab.
KEY VOCAB AND PHRASES
Gabriella: Let’s take a closer look at the usage of some of the words and phrases from this lesson. There are two numbers we have to pay special attention to. "One million" and "zero."
Medina: Well, when it comes to zero, I can't think of any good examples with the number where we pronounce all the digits separately, other than a phone number.
Gabriella: And one million is a number you'd most likely only use if you hit the jackpot!
Medina: It’s true, at least when it comes to money.
Gabriella: What about all the other millions? Doesn't the ending change?
Medina: It does, but it will be easy to remember.
Gabriella: Listeners, repeat after Medina
Medina: million moja.
Gabriella: (pause) "one million"
Medina: Milioni mbili
Gabriella: (pause) "two million"
Medina: Milioni tatu
Gabriella: (pause) "three million"
Medina: So, as you can see, the change is that million becomes milioni when plural.
Gabriella: Can you give us an example of a big number?
Medina: Let me think of a meaningful one...How about Milioni thelathini na mbili elfu mia nane na themanini na mbili mia mbili na arobaini.
Gabriella: Wow! that is a big number, what does it mean?
Medina: It's actually the Kenyan population!
Gabriella: Okay, so we use our usual formula here. "Thirty-two million, eight-hundred and eighty-two thousand, two-hundred and forty." And now, let's have another example—the only one where we pronounce digits separately in Swahili—a phone number.
Medina: sufuri, saba, mbili, nne, nane, sufuri, tano, moja, tisa, tatu.
Gabriella: That’s [0 - 7 - 2 - 4 - 8 - 0 - 5 - 1 - 9 - 3] They can also be pronounced in tens, but to make it clearer, we use separate digits. Okay, now onto the grammar.

Lesson focus

Gabriella: In this lesson, you’ll learn higher numbers in Swahili - those between 100 and 1 million.
Medina: We've already learned how to say "one hundred," mia moja. So, to build multiples of 100 we simply take the words for the numbers 2 to 9 and place them after mia.
Gabriella: Placing mia at the beginning can be difficult at first, but you'll get the hang of it. So listen and repeat.
Medina: mia mbili
Gabriella: (pause) "200"
Medina: mia tatu
Gabriella: (pause) "300"
Medina: mia nne
Gabriella: (pause) "400"
Medina: mia tano
Gabriella: (pause) "500"
Medina: mia sita
Gabriella: (pause) "600"
Medina: mia saba
Gabriella: (pause) "700"
Medina: mia nane
Gabriella: (pause) "800"
Medina: mia tisa
Gabriella: (pause) "900"
Medina: In the last Boot Camp lesson, we learned how to build multi-digit numbers by adding na, meaning “and,” where we connect the digits.
Gabriella: Right. Now we'll use the same system to build numbers from 200 to 999. OK. Medina will give me a Swahili number and I’ll say the English.
Medina: mia nne na moja.
Gabriella: "401." It sounds familiar. Oh, there was a horror TV show in America called "Room 401." What’s next?
Medina: Oh really, in Swahili that would be Chumba cha mia nne na moja. Another example would be Chumba cha mia mbili thelathini na saba.
Gabriella: “Room 237”. Why do you come up with such creepy numbers? Room 237 was the one in Steven King's "The Shining,"
Medina: Yeah, somehow I have a good memory for creepy things.
Gabriella: Anyway, if we take it in parts, it translates as "two hundred and thirty-seven."
Medina: And next mia tisa na kumi na nne.
Gabriella: A literal translation into English is "nine-hundred and ten and four." And luckily, I have a better association with the number "914". There was a cute old Porsche built many decades ago called the VW-Porsche 914.
Medina: And about five years earlier, the Porsche mia tisa na kumi na nne was built.
Gabriella: "912." Okay, see if you can remember any other interesting numbers over 1000. Oh, but first, Medina, what’s the word for "thousands" again please?
Medina: elfu
Gabriella: So 1000?
Medina: elfu moja is "1000", but you don't really have to say moja, for "one" here.
Gabriella: OK, got it. And "4000?"
Medina: elfu nne.
Gabriella: So we take the number for "4" and add it to the word for "thousand."
Medina: Yes. It's elfu and then the number “4,” nne, to give elfu nne.
Gabriella: So here's the rest of the thousands from 2000 to 9000. Listeners, repeat after Medina.
Medina: elfu mbili (pause), elfu tatu (pause), elfu nne (pause), elfu tano (pause), elfu sita (pause), elfu saba (pause), elfu nane (pause), elfu tisa (pause).
Gabriella: When we say "twenty-one thousand," "twenty-two thousand," "twenty-three thousand," and so on, we just say elfu followed by the number.
Medina: elfu ishirini na moja, elfu ishirini na mbili, elfu ishirini na tatu, and so on.
Gabriella: OK. So give us a complicated four-digit number please.
Medina: elfu mbili na kumi na mbili.
Gabriella: That's the year "Two thousand and twelve".
Medina: How about elfu tisini mia mbili na kumi.
Gabriella: Another TV show number, 90210. But in Kenya, you’d say that as, "ninety thousand, two hundred, and ten”.
Medina: elfu tisini mia mbili na kumi.
Gabriella: Okay, give us the last one, Medina. The year you were born, for example.
Medina: Oh, you didn't have to say, "for example" to know my age. Anyway, I've mentioned it before. So, the year I was born is elfu moja mia tisa themanini na tano, which is quite a different way from how the years are counted in English.
Gabriella: "Nineteen eighty-five" will be "one thousand, nine hundred, and eighty-five." So the formula with numbers in the thousands is - first you say how many thousands you have, then how many hundreds, then tens, then ones.
Medina: Yes, like in most languages. Well, I think that's a lot of numbers.
Gabriella: Yes it is. I've more than satisfied my number quota for the day!

Outro

Gabriella: That's it for this lesson, and for this series. We hope you’ve enjoyed it and found it useful. We’ll see you in another series! Bye!
Medina: Bye.

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