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Encyclopedia > Swazi

The Swazi are a Bantu-speaking people in southeastern Africa, chiefly in Swaziland and South Africa and some in Mozambique, who speak the siSwati language. They also speak Afrikaans in South Africa, English in South Africa and Swaziland, and Portuguese in Mozambique and South Africa as second languages. More Swazi live in South Africa than in Swaziland. The term Swazi may refer to: Swazi, a people of southwestern Africa Swazi language Swaziland, or a citizen thereof A slang term for Swastika. ... Map showing the approximate distribution of Bantu (dull yellow) vs. ... A world map showing the continent of Africa Africa is the worlds second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. ... Swati (also known as siSwati and Swazi) is a Bantu language spoken in Swaziland and South Africa. ... Look up Wiktionary:Swadesh lists for Afrikaans and Dutch in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Swazi Seeds, Seed for Swazi weed (cannabis) (94 words)
Swazi is an original pure sativa strain from Swaziland.
Swazi can grow up to 3m tall with huge 13 finger leaves and has long sticky buds.
Swazi is moderate in strength and very suitable for light smokers.
Childhood Education (8057 words)
Although Swazi mothers have been and still remain the primary caregivers and take on the brunt of the responsibility for early childhood education, the entire community views the education of a child as its responsibility (Matsebula 1988).
Because art did not have a high level of importance in Swazi society, drawing or painting were skills which were not highly valued and therefore not purposefully taught to children as part of their regular informal education.
Likewise, with 80 percent of the Swazi population continuing to reside on rural agrarian homesteads, this sample is also representative of the majority of rural Swazi children.
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