mtambikaji

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Swahili[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From m- +‎ -tambika +‎ -ji.

Noun[edit]

mtambikaji (m-wa class, plural watambikaji)

  1. This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.

References[edit]

  • Broomfield, G. W. (1931) “The Re-Bantuization of the Swahili Language”, in Africa[1], volume 4, number 1, →DOI, page 83 of 77-85:
    'High Priest', in the case of the Jewish high priests and the 'Great High Priest' of the Epistle to the Hebrews, is translated Mtambikaji Mkuu. The word mtambikaji is bound up with animism; it denotes the medicine man who performs such rites as the pouring out of libations of beer at the foot of a sacred tree as a propitiation of the ancestral spirits.
  • Bolton, Caitlyn (2016) “Making Africa Legible: Kiswahili Arabic and Orthographiic Romanization in Colonial Zanzibar”, in American Journal of Islam and Society[2], volume 33, number 3, →DOI, page 67 of 61–78:
    Further, the Bantu words that he adopted as more authentic carried pagan “ideas which one is particularly anxious to eradicate.” For example, “High Priest” was translated as Mtambikaji Mkuu, with mtambikaji referencing “animism” and denoting a medicine man who sacrifices to the ancestral spirits, rather than the common Arabic loan word “Kuhani,” which happens to also be a cognate to the original term in Hebrew ('cohen).