LuGanda


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Words related to LuGanda

the Bantu language of the Buganda people

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
I may have first learnt Luganda in my life, then English and eventually Kiswahili.
Stimuli videos were produced in Luganda--the primary local language spoken in Mityana--and enumerators were trained to administer the survey orally either in English or Luganda according to the participants' preferences.2 To guard against the falsification of interviews, the location of each interview was geotagged automatically on the tablets.
These interviews, which took place at the end of the intervention, were conducted in English and Luganda in a private room at the clinic.
The film has been translated into English, Swahili, Luganda and Runyakitara.
In 1947, scientists researching yellow fever placed a rhesus macaque in a cage in the Zika Forest (zika meaning "overgrown" in the Luganda language), near the East African Virus Research Institute in Entebbe, Uganda.
Commonly, Tamarindus indica is known by the following local names: English names (Madeira mahogany, Indian date, and tamarind); trade name (tamarind); Ateso, Eastern Uganda (Epeduru); Luo, Northern Uganda (cwao); Luganda, Lake Victoria Crescent zone (mukoge), as well as Lugbara and Madi dialects of West Nile (Iti) in Uganda.
All the interviews were conducted in the local languages (Luganda in Mukono district and Lugwere in Pallisa district) and audio recorded.
The education sessions were conducted by one or two midwives in the local language (Luganda).
Luganda, 2016: (Un)natural disasters: Communicating the linkages between extreme events and climate change.
Gowers, issued a policy statement on language and declared Kiswahili as a language of instruction in schools within regions that previously used Luganda as a language of instruction.
After World War II, the Rockefeller Foundation investigators, looking for a new location to study yellow fever transmission, came across the Zika Forest, an isolated area of dense vegetation and swampland in Eastern Uganda (ziika means overgrown in the Luganda language; the second i was dropped by Europeans).
Each interview lasted between thirty and forty-five minutes and all the interviews were conducted in Luganda (the local language of central Uganda).