Analogical Kiswahili is not merely a work of linguistics.
It constitutes an ambitious attempt to reconstruct the theoretical foundations of Kiswahili through its deep structures of symbolization, its phonological logic, and its semantic architecture.
In contrast to approaches that reduce African languages to simple instruments of communication, this work proposes an understanding of Kiswahili as a system of thought, a cognitive technology, and a matrix for representing reality.
Through a rigorous exploration of vowels, consonants, existential categories, morphological structures, and semantic equations, the author argues that the Swahili word is not arbitrary. Rather, it emerges from an analogical organization in which each phoneme participates in the construction of meaning.
The work develops, among other themes:
- a symbolic theory of vowels;
- a phonological theory of consonants;
- a holographic conception of Bantu language;
- a morphological approach grounded in existential poles;
- a theory of proforms and verbal nuclei;
- a reflection on African linguistic engineering;
- a vision of Kiswahili as an emerging scientific language.
At the intersection of linguistics, philosophy of language, symbolic anthropology, and contemporary African thought, Analogical Kiswahili opens a new field of research into Bantu languages and their civilizational potential.
This work is intended for:
- linguists;
- scholars in African studies;
- philosophers of language;
- students;
- educators;
- and all those interested in the relationships between language, thought, and African cultural renaissance.
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