sna ISO 639

Chishona Autonyms

Shona

  • Geography

    ZW Harare, Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland West, and Midlands provinces. Manicaland province, Nyanga district (Hwesa dialect); Mashonaland East, Mudzi and Mutoko districts (Budja dialect).
  • Language Cloud

A language of Zimbabwe

sna
chiShona, “Swina” (pej.)
Chishona
10,660,000 in Zimbabwe, all users. L1 users: 7,160,000 in Zimbabwe (2012). L2 users: 3,500,000 (2019). Total users in all countries: 10,865,590 (as L1: 7,365,590; as L2: 3,500,000).
Harare, Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland West, and Midlands provinces. Manicaland province, Nyanga district (Hwesa dialect); Mashonaland East, Mudzi and Mutoko districts (Budja dialect).
Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe
3 (Wider communication). Recognized language (2013, Constitution, Article 6(1)). Migrated to what is today’s Zimbabwe during the great Bantu expansion in the first half of the first millennium; became widespread in the 11th century. Gained vitality duiring British control at the end of the 19th century. Used in trade, literary tradition, and education.
Niger-Congo, Atlantic-Congo, Volta-Congo, Benue-Congo, Bantoid, Southern, Narrow Bantu, Central, S, Shona (S.10)
Karanga (Chikaranga), Zezuru (Bazezuru, Bazuzura, Chizezuru, Harava, Hera, Mazizuru, Shawasha, Vazezuru, Wazezuru), Korekore (Goba, Gova, Northern Shona, Shangwe), Hwesa (Chihwesa), Budja. Subdialects: Karanga: Duma, Jena, Mhari (Mari), Ngova, Nyubi, Govera; Korekore: Budya, Gova, Tande, Tavara, Nyongwe, Pfunde, Shan Gwe; Zezuru: Shawasha, Gova, Mbire, Tsunga, Kachikwakwa, Harava, Nohwe, Njanja, Nobvu, Kwazwimba (Zimba); Shona: Toko, Hwesa. Rozvi (Rozwi, Ruzwi, Chirozwi) speak Karanga dialect. Ndau [ndc] and Manyika [mxc] are partially intelligible of Shona.
SVO; noun head initial; 13 noun classes; no articles; verb affixes mark person, number, object; passives; causatives; 31 consonants, 5 vowels, 2 diphthongs; tonal (2 tones: high, low).
Dominant African language understood by a considerable number. Primarily a written language apparently based on Karanga and Zezuru with lexical items also from Manyika and Korekore. Urban populations tend to speak school or standard Shona. Also use English [eng]. Used as L2 by Chichewa [nya], Kalanga [kck], Kunda [kdn], Nambya [nmq], Nsenga [nse], Tonga [toi], Zimbabwe Sign Language [zib].
Literacy rate in L2: 86% in English [eng] and Shona [sna]. Taught in some primary schools in grades 1–3 in areas where Shona is spoken. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible: 1949–1980.
Braille script [Brai]. Latin script [Latn], primary usage.
Traditional religion, Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Shona
Shona
11,000 in Australia (2016 census).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Shona
3,190 in Canada (2016 census).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Shona
21,400 in United Kingdom (2011 census).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Shona
93,000 in Malawi (2021 Joshua Project), based on ethnicity.
Unestablished
Non-indigenous. Migrant laborers.
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Shona
18,000 in South Africa (2012 J. Leclerc).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Shona
12,700 in Zambia (2010 census). Ethnic population: 21,900 (2010 census).
Lusaka province: southeast of the capital; Southern province: Slavonga district; possibly Central province: near Zimbabwe border.
Korekore (Budya, Goba, Gova, Gowa, Korikori, Makorekore, Northern Shona, Wakorikori).
6b (Threatened)
Home, community.
Korekore is the main dialect in Zambia, with subdialect Goba.
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Zezuru
46,300 in Botswana (2020).
Central district: north; North West district: northeast.
Karanga.
5 (Dispersed)
Non-indigenous.
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