ŵa
See also: Appendix:Variations of "wa"
Tumbuka
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Bantu *-báa.
Verb
-ŵa (infinitive kuŵa)
Derived terms
- -ŵapo (“to be present”)
- -ŵa na (“to have”)
- -ŵa maso (“to be awake”)
- -ŵa pachanya (“to be pregnant”)
- kaŵiro (“nature, habit”)
Particle
ŵa
- Class 2 inflected form of -a
See also
| singular | plural | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| class 1 | wa | class 2 | ŵa | ||
| class 3 | wa | class 4 | ya | ||
| class 5 | la | class 6 | gha | ||
| class 7 | ca | class 8 | vya | ||
| class 9 | ya | class 10 | za | ||
| class 11 | lwa | ||||
| class 12 | ka | class 13 | twa | ||
| class 14 | wa | ||||
| class 15 | kwa | ||||
| locative classes | |||||
| class 16 | class 17 | class 18 | |||
| pa | kwa | mwa | |||
References
- William Y. Turner (1996), Tumbuka/Tonga-English and English - Tumbuka/Tonga Dictionary[1], Central Africana Limited, pages 4, 177, 178, 215
Yao
Etymology 1
Inherited from Proto-Bantu *-báa.
Verb
-ŵa (infinitive kuŵa)
Etymology 2
Inherited from Proto-Bantu *báá-
Particle
ŵa
- Class 2 inflected form of -a