Word for the Travel Wise (11/13/06)

Every time I hear Amel Larrieux sing how she’s got to get to Congo I somehow fix myself to thinking I need to get there too and the Congo is really a place I’m in no rush to see. Still, I don’t mind picking up a few words should I manage to find myself there one day. As mentioned before I’m limited to good language sources for this particular tongue, so I’m reaching back into the English to Tshiluba quiz found at the Internet TESL Journal. Try this one and then sample Amel Larrieux’s music for yourself.

Today’s word is a Tshiluba word used in the Democratic Republic of the Congo:

kulela – colors


Tshiluba is a Narrow Bantu also known as Luba-Kasai and Luba-Lulua. It is an official lang of the DRC in addition to French. Approximately 6,300,000 people speak the lingo and additional web resources are scarce. Feel free to leave a comment with any extra resources that could help others learn a bit more than what I’ve noted. You can continue learning the words for your own favorite colors by taking this English-Tshiluba quiz online. Chances are you’ll get all of them wrong, unless you’re an extremely talented guesser. After enough trial and error you’ll eventually be able to ramble off all the colors of the rainbow and have no one to tell them to, except in the Congo.

Past Tshiluba words: manimani, kalabi

Word for the Travel Wise (06/25/06)

So what if we’re limited to learning only ten colors in the Tshiluba language – knowing ten colors in any foreign language is better than knowing nothing at all. Last time I took the English to Tshiluba quiz at the Internet TESL Journal I provided you with the word for orange. After taking the quiz yet another time I leave you with this one…

Today’s word is a Tshiluba word used in the Democratic Republic of the Congo:

kalabi
– yellow

Tshiluba is a Narrow Bantu also known as Luba-Kasai and Luba-Lulua. It is an official lang of the DRC in addition to French. Approximately 6,300,000 people speak the lingo and additional web resources are scarce. Feel free to leave a comment with any extra resources that could help others learn a bit more than what I’ve noted. You can continue learning the words for your own favorite colors by taking this English-Tshiluba quiz online. Chances are you’ll get all of them wrong, unless you’re an extremely talented guesser. After enough trial and error you’ll eventually be able to ramble off all the colors of the rainbow and have no one to tell them to, except in the Congo.

Past Tshiluba words: manimani

Hippie Chimpanzees: Get Drunk and Eat

It’s a very sad world indeed when one is confronted with a sense of urgency when
merely wanting to view wild animals in their native habitat.  But, if you don’t move quickly, you may just lose
that opportunity with the bonobo chimpanzee

Only about 5,000 bonobo remain in the rainforests of Congo.  This is due to a rather unfortunate fact:
they’re good eatin’.  The meat from a bonobo can fetch up to $200 from local restaurateurs, a rather
hefty amount in this poor nation.  As a result, hunters have taken to the forests with guns and bottles of
alcohol.  It seems the apes have an affinity for beer and once drunk, are easily caught as the alcohol dulls their
brachiating abilities.

While getting apes drunk and eating them is a tragedy in anyone’s book, it seems far worse in the case of the
bonobo because of their reputation as the “hippie chimpanzee.”  They’ve earned this moniker
through their embrasure of free love.  When rival groups meet each other in the forests, they do so with
“genital handshakes” and massages.  If an argument results—which is hard to believe after such a
greeting—it usually ends with a French kiss and a quickie in the forest.  Afterwards they share a
joint.  Okay, just kidding about the last part, but you can understand how the tragedy of killing such creatures
is made even worse by the caring and peaceful lifestyle they embrace.

Efforts to save the gentle beasts have resulted in the Bonobo Paradise Sanctuary in the Congolese capital
of Kinshasa where workers rescue the animals from the menus of underground restaurants around the city.  This is
your best bet to spot the endangered chimpanzees, unless, of course, you head out to the forest with a couple bottles
of Heineken. 

 

Word for the Travel Wise (02/19/06)

Since it is Sunday, I decided to relax a little on today’s feature by teaching a word we may never use in our entire lives. A word that requires no further online study unless you choose to do so, but for now you can file it under useless trivia.

Today’s word is a Tshiluba word used in the Democratic Republic of the Congo:

manimani – orange

Tshiluba is a Narrow Bantu also known as Luba-Kasai and Luba-Lulua. It is an official lang of the DRC in addition to French. Approximately 6,300,000 people speak the lingo and additional web resources are scarce. Feel free to leave a comment with any extra resources that could help others learn a bit more than what I’ve noted. Orange happens to rank high on my list of favorite colors so when it came down to picking time I decided on this one. You can continue learning the words for your own favorite colors by taking this English-Tshiluba quiz online. Chances are you’ll get all of them wrong, unless you’re an extremely talented guesser. After enough trial and error you’ll eventually be able to ramble off all the colors of the rainbow and have no one to tell them to, except in the Congo.

Africa Travel: Angola

As foreign and far as Angola may seem the country should be sounding just as familiar as home by now. Okay, well not quite, but it shouldn’t sound that strange. For starters their football team will be playing in this years World Cup and CNN had a piece on the call for tourists in capital city, Luanda some weeks back. Aside from sports and warm sandy beaches lining the coasts Angola is still a very happening spot in Southern Africa. To be more precise in the location, the country borders the South Atlantic Ocean and sits between Nambia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. For a picture view of what the country is like check out this photo gallery at Angola.org.uk. Outside of the official tourism website, they provide some of the most extensive information you’ll probably find on the web. Whether you’re out for some Kizomba dance, cultural entertainment, a trip to the slave museum, or soaking up Angola’s outdoors like Black Stones in Malanje, the Cuenne River, or Benguela Bay you’re bound to be impressed. Heck, I was, but I’m easy to please.