Learn Tswana: Complete Beginner's Guide
Table of Contents
1. Why Learn Tswana? 2. History and Spread of Tswana 3. Writing System and Pronunciation 4. Basic Grammar: Noun Classes and Agreement 5. Greetings and Essential Expressions 6. Essential Vocabulary by Theme 7. Botho Philosophy (Ubuntu) 8. Tswana Culture: Living Traditions 9. The Tswana Diaspora Worldwide 10. Learn Tswana with Targumi---
Why Learn Tswana?
Tswana (or Setswana) is a Bantu language spoken by approximately 8 million people in Botswana, South Africa, Namibia, and Zimbabwe. It is the national language of Botswana — one of Africa's most stable and prosperous countries — and one of South Africa's 12 official languages.
Tswana is much more than a communication tool. It is the language of a civilization that developed profound philosophical concepts — Botho (the Tswana equivalent of Ubuntu) — and built one of the most remarkable economic success stories on the African continent.
Botswana: The African miracle. In 1966, at independence, Botswana was one of the poorest countries in the world, with just 3 km of paved road. Today, it is a stable democracy with one of the highest per capita GDPs in Africa. Diamonds funded the development, but wise governance and the philosophy of Botho made the difference. Speaking Tswana means understanding this success from the inside. A gateway to Bantu languages. Tswana shares fundamental structures with Zulu, Xhosa, Sotho, Lingala, and Swahili. Learning Tswana facilitates learning dozens of other African languages. The noun class system, agreement patterns, and agglutinative structure are common across the Bantu family. Safari tourism. The Okavango Delta, the Kalahari Desert, Chobe National Park — Botswana has some of the most spectacular ecosystems on the planet. Speaking Tswana transforms a safari into an authentic cultural experience.---
History and Spread of Tswana
Tswana belongs to the Sotho-Tswana branch of the great Bantu family. It is closely related to Northern Sotho (Sepedi) and Southern Sotho (Sesotho). These three languages form a largely mutually intelligible dialect continuum.
Bantu Origins
Bantu peoples migrated to southern Africa between the 3rd and 5th centuries, bringing agriculture, metallurgy, and their languages. The Tswana settled in the region corresponding to present-day Botswana and northwestern South Africa around the 11th century.
Tswana Kingdoms
Before colonization, the Tswana were organized into several independent kingdoms: the Bakwena, Bangwato, Batawana, Bakgatla, Barolong, and others. The Tswana political system was remarkably democratic: the kgotla (assembly) allowed every adult male to voice opinions on community decisions. The chief (kgosi) governed by consensus, not decree.
The British Protectorate and Independence
In 1885, three Tswana chiefs (Khama III, Bathoen I, and Sebele I) traveled to London to request British Crown protection against Boer expansion — one of the first successful acts of African international diplomacy. Bechuanaland became a protectorate, protecting the Tswana from incorporation into South Africa.
On September 30, 1966, Botswana gained independence under Seretse Khama — a Tswana chief who had married an Englishwoman, Ruth Williams, defying the racial laws of the era. Their love story was adapted into the film A United Kingdom (2016).
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Writing System and Pronunciation
Tswana is written in the Latin alphabet with relatively transparent orthography.
Vowels
Tswana has 7 vowels (or 9 depending on analysis):
| Vowel |
| Example |
| ------- |
| --------- |
| a |
| ausi |
| e |
| letsatsi |
| i |
| pitse |
| o |
| motho |
| u |
| pula |
| Consonant |
| Example |
| ----------- |
| --------- |
| tl |
| tlhogo |
| tlh |
| tlhapi |
| kg |
| kgomo |
| ph |
| phiri |
| th |
| thaba |
| ng |
| ngwana |
| Class |
| Example |
| Plural class |
| Example |
| ------- |
| --------- |
| ------------- |
| --------- |
| 1 |
| motho |
| 2 |
| batho |
| 3 |
| mosetlha |
| 4 |
| mesetlha |
| 5 |
| leina |
| 6 |
| maina |
| 7 |
| setlhare |
| 8 |
| ditlhare |
| 9 |
| nku |
| 10 |
| dinku |
| Tense |
| Example |
| ------- |
| --------- |
| Present |
| Ke a tsamaya |
| Past |
| Ke tsamaile |
| Future |
| Ke tla tsamaya |
| Person |
| Verbal prefix |
| -------- |
| --------------- |
| I |
| ke- |
| You |
| o- |
| He/She |
| o- |
| We |
| re- |
| You (pl.) |
| lo- |
| They |
| ba- |
| Tswana |
| English |
| -------- |
| --------- |
| Dumela (sg.) / Dumelang (pl.) |
| Hello |
| O tsogile jang? |
| How are you? (lit. "how did you wake up?") |
| Ke tsogile sentle |
| I'm well (lit. "I woke up well") |
| Le kamoso |
| See you tomorrow |
| Tsamaya sentle |
| Go well (goodbye to the one leaving) |
| Sala sentle |
| Stay well (goodbye to the one staying) |
| Ke a leboga |
| Thank you |
| Ke a go rata |
| I love you |
| Ee / Nnyaa |
| Yes / No |
| Leina la gago ke mang? |
| What's your name? |
| Tswana |
| Note |
| -------- |
| ------ |
| metsi |
| thaba |
| letsatsi |
| ngwedi |
| pula |
| also Botswana's currency name |
| phefo |
| lefatshe |
| setlhare |
| also "medicine" (traditional) |
| molelo |
| noka |
| Tswana |
| Note |
| -------- |
| ------ |
| tau |
| also a common first name |
| tlou |
| phiri |
| kgomo |
| traditional wealth |
| kwena |
| nare |
| kubu |
| pitse |
| Number |
| -------- |
| 1 |
| 2 |
| 3 |
| 4 |
| 5 |
| 10 |
| 100 |
| 1000 |
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Botho Philosophy (Ubuntu)
"Motho ke motho ka batho"
The concept of Botho is at the heart of Tswana culture. The foundational expression is: Motho ke motho ka batho — "A person is a person through other people." This is the Tswana equivalent of Ubuntu, popularized by Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela.
Botho encompasses: respect, generosity, community, compassion, and consensus. In Botswana, Botho is not abstract — it's a daily code of conduct.
The Kgotla: Tswana Democracy
The kgotla is the traditional Tswana assembly, open to all adult males. Every voice counts. The chief presides but doesn't decide alone — he listens, synthesizes, and proposes. This system has been recognized as one of the oldest democratic systems in the world, influencing Botswana's modern governance — considered Africa's most stable democracy since 1966.
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Tswana Culture: Living Traditions
Music and Dance
The setinkane (musical bow) and segaba (one-string violin) are traditional Tswana instruments. The tsutsube dance features rapid footwork and polyphonic singing.
Tswana Marriage (Patlo)
Traditional Tswana marriage involves bogadi (bride price) paid in cattle. The cow is sacred in Tswana culture — the number of cows reflects the value and respect given to the bride.
Tswana Cuisine
Diamonds and Success
Botswana is the world's 2nd largest diamond producer. Unlike many African nations, diamond revenues were invested in education, health, and infrastructure. The national motto — Pula! (Rain!) — reminds us that in a semi-arid country, rain is the greatest wealth.
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The Tswana Diaspora Worldwide
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Learn Tswana with Targumi
Targumi is one of the few platforms in the world offering structured Tswana courses for English and French speakers. Our approach combines:
Tswana is a gateway to all of southern Africa. Its Botho philosophy, ancestral democratic system, and Botswana's economic success make it a language of wisdom and modernity.
Start your Tswana journey for free on Targumi.---
Sources: Ethnologue (SIL International), Cole — An Introduction to Tswana Grammar, Schapera — The Tswana (International African Institute), Wikipedia.