For more than 15 million people in Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique, Botswana, Zimbabwe and South Africa, Chinyanja or Chichewa has become the most important language of daily life.The language has gained importance and strength by developments in its written and oral use, and because an increasing number of its speakers have come to discover and emphasise their common linguistic heritage and practice. In that way it has become an intermediary language for all Malawians, and for many ethnic groups in the whole of Central and Southern Africa.
Although the official language in Malawi is English, the Chichewa language is spoken by more than 50% of the population. Apart from the two, other languages spoken in Malawi are Chinyanja Yao, Chiyao, Tonga, Chitumbuka, Nkhonde, Tumbuka, Lomwe, Lambya, Nyiha, Ndali, Kacchi, Kokola, Zulu, and Afrikaans.
Zambia is also considered a multilingual country but its government only recognizes one language as official: English. Of the 17 million people in Zambia, only 1.91 million can speak or understand English. Chichewa is a minority language, spoken by 2 million people and Bemba is the most prominent of the 70 languages spoken with about 3 million native speakers.
This bilingual medical dictionary contains over 3500 definitionsm 700 phrases and 1,000 Acronyms and abbreviations. It is divided into five parts:
A Guide to English and Chichewa PronunciationA collection of medical terms and phrases by disciplineEnglish / Chichewa terms with part of speech and definitions in English.Acronyms and Abbreviations with Chichewa translation.Chichewa / English Index.