matatu

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English

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Etymology

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Passengers boarding a matatu in Kenya.

Borrowed from Swahili matatu, a clipping of mapeni matatu (thirty cents, literally three ten-cent coins) (the flat fare paid for such transportation in the 1960s). The word matatu is from ma- (prefix forming plurals) + -tatu (three) (from Proto-Bantu *-tátʊ̀ (three)).[1]

Pronunciation

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Noun

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matatu (plural matatus or matatu)

  1. (Kenya, Uganda) A minivan used as a share taxi, especially one operating without a licence.
    Synonyms: (Tanzania) daladala, (Sheng slang) mathree
    • 1982, United Nations Centre for Human Settlements Habitat News:
      A matatu is also more profitable when driven by its owner than by an employed driver, or if the employee-driver pays in all the earnings and the owner meets the operating costs, rather than when the owner demands a fixed sum of money daily, with the operator keeping the surplus.
    • 2010, Philo Ikonya, Leading the Night, page 102:
      For now, matatus made lanes along both sides of tarmac main roads and went over, around or through potholes depending on their speed.
    • 2017, Kenda Mutongi, Matatu: A History of Popular Transportation in Nairobi, page 98:
      Memories of their sense of trepidation, or even the anger, aboard a matatu could still be visceral.
    • 2024 January 13, David Pilling, “Revenge of the moderators”, in FT Weekend, Life & Arts, page 15:
      The roads were jammed with matatu minibuses sporting cartoonish liveries, and trucks billowing black smoke into the dazzling African light.

Hypernyms

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Derived terms

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Translations

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ matatu, n.”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford: Oxford University Press, December 2018; matatu, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.

Further reading

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Spanish

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Noun

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matatu m (plural matatus)

  1. matatu

Swahili

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Etymology

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From -tatu (three), based on the original flat fare of thirty cents in the 1960s.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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matatu (ma class, plural matatu)

  1. (Kenya) matatu
    Synonyms: (Tanzania) daladala, (Sheng) mathree, (Sheng) moshogi, (Sheng) shedhi

Adjective

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matatu

  1. Ma class inflected form of -tatu.