Form with which the stockholders of a corporation record the contents of their annual meeting.
Form with which the stockholders of a corporation record the contents of their annual meeting.
To make it even more complicated, the division between am and pm is also not as straightforward as one might think. The following words should be added for this distinction: Alfajiri (4am-5am), asubuhi (6am-12pm), mchana (12pm-3pm), jioni (4pm-7pm), usiku (8pm-3am).
Meeting minutes are the written record of what was discussed and decided during a meeting. They typically include the date and time of the meeting, a list of attendees, a summary of the topics discussed, decisions made, action items assigned, and the time of adjournment.
Remember we start counting the morning. Hours so 7 00 a.m is the first hour 8 00 a.m is the secondMoreRemember we start counting the morning. Hours so 7 00 a.m is the first hour 8 00 a.m is the second hour and so on and so forth until 6 pm. And once we strike 7 pm. We start counting the evening.
Swahili Translation. meza ya muda. More Swahili words for timetable. ratiba noun.
“Kipikikusikitishacho” is the longest word in the Swahili language.
Swahili Time Timekeeping in Swahili can be quite different than common time keeping. In Swahili, the time of a new day does not begin at midnight, instead it begins at sunrise. And because we are near the equator in Tanzania, the sun always rises near 6 am and sets around 6 pm.
The three most important dialects are kiUnguja (or Kiunguja), spoken on Zanzibar and in the mainland areas of Tanzania; kiMvita (or Kimvita), spoken in Mombasa and other areas of Kenya; and kiAmu (or Kiamu), spoken on the island of Lamu and adjoining parts of the coast.
Swahili is an SVO language in which the verbal clause has the following order of morphemes in an affirmative indicative sentence: Subject Agreement – Tense/Aspect – (Object Agreement) – Verb Root – (derivational suffixes) – Mood Vowel.
There are basically five ways to say hello in Swahili: – Sijambo (seeJAmbo) (I am fine / no worries) Habari? (any news?) – nzuri (nZOOree) (fine) U hali gani? (oo HAlee GAnee) (how are you) – njema (fine)
Swahili uses Roman alphabets and is written from left to right. However, there are certain English alphabets that do not exist in Swahili and there are a couple of Swahili alphabets that are not in English.