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Rundi ngoân-ngöõ
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AfroRoman for Mac (Times-, Helvetica- Garamond-, Palatino-, and Zapf Chancery)
AfroRoman-for-Mac-Times-Helvetica-Garamond-Palatino-and-Zapf-Chancery-AcholiAfroRoman-718


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AfroRoman for Windows
AfroRoman-for-Windows-Unicode-All-Sets-Together-AcholiAfroRoman-AfrikaansAfroRoman-690


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AfroRoman in Unicode is available for both Windows and Macintosh and provides professional-quality, Unicode-encoded fonts in TrueType OpenType format in five typestyles (Times-, Helvetica-, Garamond-, Palatino-, and Zapf Chancery-styles),...
Saûn-phaåm  Phaàn giôùi-thieäu  Maãu cuûa moät baøi vaên  Chuyeån-dòch 

Saûn-phaåm




Phaàn giôùi-thieäu


Rundi, or Kirundi, is the national language of Burundi, in east--central Africa. It is spoken by the entire population of the country, or some 6 million people. A Bantu language, Rundi is closely related to Ruanda of neighboring Rwanda—in fact, the two are little more than dialects of the same language.

Rundi ñöôïc xöû-duïng trong nhöõng quoác-gia sau ñaây:
Burundi, Coâng-Goâ (Zaire).

Language Family
Family: Niger-Congo
Subgroup: Benue-Congo
Branch: Bantu


Baûn quyeàn © Kenneth Katzner, Nhöõng ngoân ngöõ treân theá-giôùi, xuaát baûn bôûi Routledge.


Maãu cuûa moät baøi vaên




Chuyeån-dòch


Since Burundi became independent, many things have improved within the country. And since the advent of the Republic, progress has been made in many fields, especially in the state's economy. But the reason I am writing today is to try to see how education has progressed. You already know that human progress depends on many things: on education, on health, on spiritual values. I once wrote in Ndongozi [a magazine] how the gap between the educated people and the illiterate is growing wider and wider. This is understandable, since the former continue to learn while the latter remain in their illiteracy.