Bantu
[ ban-too ]
/ ˈbæn tu /
noun, plural Ban·tus, (especially collectively) Ban·tu.
a member of any of several peoples forming a linguistically and in some respects culturally interrelated family in central and southern Africa.
a grouping of more than 500 languages of central and southern Africa, as Kikuyu, Swahili, Tswana, and Zulu, all related within a subbranch of the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Kordofanian family.
adjective
of, relating to, or characteristic of Bantu or the Bantu peoples.
OTHER WORDS FROM Bantu
non-Ban·tu, noun, adjectiveExample sentences from the Web for bantu
British Dictionary definitions for bantu
Bantu
/ (ˈbɑːntʊ, ˈbæntuː, bænˈtuː) /
noun
a group of languages of Africa, including most of the principal languages spoken from the equator to the Cape of Good Hope, but excluding the Khoisan family: now generally regarded as part of the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo family
plural -tu or -tus Southern African taboo
a Black speaker of a Bantu language
adjective
denoting, relating to, or belonging to this group of peoples or to any of their languages
Word Origin for Bantu
C19: from Bantu
Ba-ntu people
usage for Bantu
Use of the term
Bantu is only acceptable outside South Africa and when talking about this group of languages and their speakers. To refer to African people or peoples, the terms
Black and
African are acceptable within South Africa