Zulu, or isiZulu, is the most widely spoken language in South Africa. With approximately 12 million native speakers, it is a pillar of South African identity. The language of the legendary King Shaka, Zulu is a powerful, rhythmic language deeply tied to a history of both warfare and poetry.
In this complete guide, we will walk you through discovering Zulu, from the basics of the alphabet to everyday expressions, covering grammar, vocabulary, and Zulu culture along the way.
Why learn Zulu?
The largest language of South Africa
Zulu belongs to the Nguni language family, a subgroup of the Bantu languages. It is the most widely spoken native language in South Africa, used by nearly a quarter of the population. It is also understood in neighboring countries such as Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe.
Reasons to learn Zulu:
- Dominant language: Zulu is the most spoken language in South Africa with 12 million native speakers and millions more who understand it.
- Historical heritage: Zulu is linked to the empire of Shaka, one of the greatest military empires in Africa.
- Travel deeply: speaking Zulu in KwaZulu-Natal or Johannesburg opens doors inaccessible to ordinary tourists.
- Music and popular culture: Zulu is omnipresent in South African music, from maskandi to gqom.
- Linguistic gateway: Zulu is very close to Xhosa, Ndebele, and Swazi. Learning Zulu means understanding three other languages.
- Rich oral tradition: Zulu izibongo (praise poems) are considered one of Africa's greatest poetic traditions.
Zulu in the modern world
Zulu has an increasing presence in international media. The film Zulu (1964), the series Shaka iLembe (2023), and numerous artists like Ladysmith Black Mambazo have brought this language to worldwide attention.
Ready to discover Zulu? Start your learning journey with Targumi and enjoy courses adapted to your level.
The alphabet and writing system
Latin script
Zulu is written using the Latin alphabet, making it immediately accessible. No new script to memorize. However, some letters are pronounced differently from English.
Vowels
Zulu has 5 pure vowels, each with a fixed pronunciation:
| Vowel | Pronunciation |
|---|---|
| a | as in "father" |
| e | as in "bed" |
| i | as in "see" |
| o | as in "more" |
| u | as in "moon" |
Special consonants
| Combination | Pronunciation |
|---|---|
| ph | aspirated "p" (with a puff of air) |
| th | aspirated "t" |
| kh | aspirated "k" |
| sh | as in "ship" |
| tsh | as in "church" |
| ng | as in "singing" |
| ny | as in "canyon" |
| hl | voiceless lateral "l" |
| dl | "d" followed by lateral "l" |
| bh | aspirated "b" |
Pronunciation and clicks
Click consonants: the signature of Zulu
Like Xhosa, Zulu has click consonants. Zulu has 15 variants based on three fundamental types.
1. The dental click (c)
Place the tip of your tongue against your upper front teeth and pull it down sharply. This is the "tsk tsk" sound of disapproval.
- Example: icala (side)
2. The alveolar click (q)
Press the middle of your tongue against the roof of your mouth and click it down. It is a sharp, loud sound, like a cork popping.
- Example: iqiniso (truth)
3. The lateral click (x)
Place your tongue against your molars and click it to the side. This is the sound sometimes used to encourage a horse.
- Example: uxolo (forgiveness)
The 15 click variants
Each click type comes in 5 variants:
| Type | Simple | Aspirated | Nasal | Voiced | Nasal aspirated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dental | c | ch | nc | gc | nkc |
| Alveolar | q | qh | nq | gq | nkq |
| Lateral | x | xh | nx | gx | nkx |
Tips for practicing clicks
- Start with the dental click (c): it is the easiest
- Practice slowly: isolate the sound before integrating it into a word
- Listen to native speakers: Zulu music is excellent for this
- Do not get discouraged: even Zulu children take time to master all clicks
Essential greetings
Basic greetings
| Zulu | English | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Sawubona | Hello (to one person) | General |
| Sanibonani | Hello (to several people) | General |
| Unjani? | How are you? | Informal |
| Ninjani? | How are you all? | Formal |
| Ngiyaphila, ngiyabonga | I am well, thank you | Standard response |
| Sala kahle | Goodbye (said by the one leaving) | General |
| Hamba kahle | Goodbye (said to the one leaving) | General |
| Ngiyabonga | Thank you | General |
| Ngiyabonga kakhulu | Thank you very much | General |
| Yebo | Yes | General |
| Cha | No | General |
Practice dialogues
Meeting at the market:
- A: Sawubona! Unjani? (Hello! How are you?)
- B: Ngiyaphila, ngiyabonga. Wena unjani? (I am well, thank you. And you?)
- A: Nami ngiyaphila. (I am well too.)
Formal meeting:
- A: Sanibonani. Ninjani? (Hello everyone. How are you all?)
- B: Siyaphila, siyabonga. (We are well, thank you.)
Introducing yourself
- Igama lami ngingu... = My name is...
- Ngivela e... = I come from...
- Ngikhuluma isiZulu = I speak Zulu
- Ngifunda isiZulu = I am learning Zulu
Respect forms
Zulu is a language where respect plays an essential role. The prefix "u-" is placed before the names of older or respected people, and the terms "baba" (father) or "mama" (mother) are used to respectfully address an older man or woman.
Basic grammar
The noun class system
Like Xhosa, Zulu has a system of 15 noun classes. This is the backbone of Zulu grammar.
| Class | Prefix (singular) | Prefix (plural) | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/2 | um(u)- | aba- | umfana / abafana (boy / boys) |
| 3/4 | um(u)- | imi- | umuthi / imithi (tree / trees) |
| 5/6 | i(li)- | ama- | ilanga / amalanga (day / days) |
| 7/8 | isi- | izi- | isikole / izikole (school / schools) |
| 9/10 | in- | izin- | indlu / izindlu (house / houses) |
| 11 | u(lu)- | - | usuku (day) |
| 14 | ubu- | - | ubuntu (humanity) |
| 15 | uku- | - | ukudla (food) |
Agglutination
Zulu is an agglutinative language, meaning a single word can contain the equivalent of an entire sentence in English. Prefixes and suffixes attach to the verb root:
- Ngiyamthanda = I love him/her (ngi- = I, -ya- = present, -m- = him/her, -thanda = love)
- Angimthandi = I do not love him/her (a- = negation, -ngi- = I, -m- = him/her, -thandi = love + negation)
- Ngizomthanda = I will love him/her (ngi- = I, -zo- = future, -m- = him/her, -thanda = love)
Sentence structure
The basic order is Subject-Verb-Object (SVO):
- Umama upheka ukudla = Mom is cooking food
- Ingane idlala ngaphandle = The child is playing outside
- Ubaba ufunda incwadi = Dad is reading a book
Concordance
Everything in the sentence agrees with the class of the subject:
- Umfana uyadlala (The boy is playing) -- class 1
- Abafana bayadlala (The boys are playing) -- class 2
- Isikole sihle (The school is beautiful) -- class 7
- Izikole zinhle (The schools are beautiful) -- class 8
Vocabulary: 50 essential words
Family
| Zulu | English |
|---|---|
| umama | mother |
| ubaba | father |
| udade | sister |
| umfowethu | brother |
| ugogo | grandmother |
| umkhulu | grandfather |
| ingane | child |
| umyeni | husband |
| inkosikazi | wife |
| umndeni | family |
Nature
| Zulu | English |
|---|---|
| ilanga | sun |
| inyanga | moon |
| inkanyezi | star |
| amanzi | water |
| umlilo | fire |
| umhlaba | earth |
| isihlahla | tree |
| intaba | mountain |
| ulwandle | sea/ocean |
| isibhakabhaka | sky |
Food
| Zulu | English |
|---|---|
| ukudla | food |
| isinkwa | bread |
| inyama | meat |
| ubisi | milk |
| irayisi | rice |
| isithelo | fruit |
| umbila | corn/maize |
| itiye | tea |
| ikhofi | coffee |
| amanzi | water |
Colors
| Zulu | English |
|---|---|
| -mhlophe | white |
| -mnyama | black |
| -bomvu | red |
| -luhlaza | green/blue |
| -phuzi | yellow |
Body
| Zulu | English |
|---|---|
| ikhanda | head |
| amehlo | eyes |
| indlebe | ear |
| ikhala | nose |
| umlomo | mouth |
| isandla | hand |
| unyawo | foot |
| inhliziyo | heart |
| umzimba | body |
| izinwele | hair |
Numbers from 1 to 20
| Number | Zulu |
|---|---|
| 1 | -nye (kunye) |
| 2 | -bili (kubili) |
| 3 | -thathu (kuthathu) |
| 4 | -ne (kune) |
| 5 | -hlanu (kuhlanu) |
| 6 | -isithupha (yisithupha) |
| 7 | -isikhombisa (yisikhombisa) |
| 8 | -isishiyagalombili (yisishiyagalombili) |
| 9 | -isishiyagalolunye (yisishiyagalolunye) |
| 10 | -ishumi (yishumi) |
| 11 | ishumi nanye |
| 12 | ishumi nambili |
| 13 | ishumi nantathu |
| 14 | ishumi nane |
| 15 | ishumi nanhlanu |
| 16 | ishumi nesithupha |
| 17 | ishumi nesikhombisa |
| 18 | ishumi nesishiyagalombili |
| 19 | ishumi nesishiyagalolunye |
| 20 | amashumi amabili |
Fun fact: the Zulu word for 8 (isishiyagalombili) literally means "two left to reach ten" and the word for 9 (isishiyagalolunye) means "one left to reach ten." Fascinating!
Useful everyday phrases
At the market
- Kubiza malini lokhu? = How much does this cost?
- Kudulile = It is too expensive
- Ngifuna ukuthenga... = I want to buy...
- Ngiyabonga kakhulu = Thank you very much
Asking for help
- Ngicela usizo = I need help
- Angiqondi = I do not understand
- Khuluma kancane = Speak slowly
- Ukhuluma isiNgisi? = Do you speak English?
- Ungangisiza? = Can you help me?
Getting around
- Kuphi i...? = Where is...?
- Ngifuna ukuya e... = I want to go to...
- Kude? = Is it far?
- Kwesokunxele = Left
- Kwesokudla = Right
- Qonda = Straight ahead
Everyday expressions
- Yebo = Yes
- Cha = No
- Ngiyabonga = Thank you
- Uxolo = Sorry
- Kulungile = OK
- Ngiyakuthanda = I love you
- Uhambe kahle = Safe travels
- Ngiyaxolisa = I am sorry
- Ngicela = Please
Zulu culture and traditions
Shaka Zulu: founder of the nation
Shaka kaSenzangakhona (c. 1787-1828) is the founder of the Zulu empire. A military genius, he revolutionized warfare in southern Africa by inventing new combat tactics and the short stabbing spear (iklwa). His empire extended over a large part of present-day South Africa.
Shaka's legacy is omnipresent in Zulu culture: warrior pride, discipline, social organization. The current Zulu king, Misuzulu kaZwelithini, is his direct descendant.
Izibongo: praise poetry
Izibongo are praise poems declaimed at ceremonies, weddings, and important events. Every king, every chief, and every warrior has their own izibongo, celebrating their exploits and lineage.
The imbongi (praise poet) is an essential figure in Zulu society. They have the right to criticize the king in their poems, a unique form of freedom of expression.
The Reed Dance (Umhlanga)
Umhlanga is an annual ceremony where thousands of young Zulu women dance before the king. It is a major cultural event celebrating purity, feminine solidarity, and tradition. It takes place every September in KwaZulu-Natal.
Ubuntu
As with the Xhosa, the concept of ubuntu ("I am because we are") is fundamental in Zulu culture. It implies respect for elders, community solidarity, and generosity.
Zulu music
Zulu music is world famous:
- Ladysmith Black Mambazo: a cappella choir that collaborated with Paul Simon on the "Graceland" album
- Maskandi: traditional musical genre played on guitar
- Isicathamiya: a cappella choral singing in formation
- Gqom: a modern electronic genre born in Durban, incorporating Zulu elements
Passionate about Zulu culture? Dive into the heart of this civilization by learning the language with Targumi. Our native tutors will help you discover much more than just words.
Learn Zulu with Targumi
At Targumi, we offer Zulu courses for all levels:
- Certified native tutors from KwaZulu-Natal and Johannesburg
- Small group classes (3-6 students) for collaborative dynamics
- Private lessons adapted to your level and goals
- Mobile app with click pronunciation exercises
- Cultural approach integrating izibongo, music, and Zulu traditions
- Immersive method for natural progress
Zulu is more than a language: it is a gateway to one of Africa's richest civilizations. Every word you learn brings you closer to the soul of South Africa.
Ngiyabonga kakhulu! (Thank you very much!)
Article written by Sipho Ndlovu, certified Zulu tutor and Targumi collaborator. At Targumi, we make learning Zulu accessible to everyone.
Sources and References
- Zulu — Ethnologue: Zulu is spoken by over 12 million native speakers. Language family: Niger-Congo, Bantu branch.
- Wikipedia — Zulu: encyclopedic information on the language, its geographic area and official status.
- Targumi — Learn Zulu: courses with certified native teachers.
Further Reading
- Learn Zulu on Targumi — courses with native teachers
- All languages on Targumi — 106 languages taught