Luba-Kasai language

Luba-Kasai, also known as Cilubà or Tshilubà,[4] Luba-Lulua,[5][6] is a Bantu language (Zone L) of Central Africa and a national language of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, alongside Lingala, Swahili, and Kikongo ya leta.

Nevertheless, it is not a typical form of a pidgin since it is not common to everyone but changes its morphology and the quantity and degree to which words from other languages are used.

However, people generally speak the regular Tshiluba language in their daily lives, rather than pidgin.

The situation of French and Tshiluba being used simultaneously made linguists mistakenly think that the language had been pidginised.

According to The Rosetta Project,[8] Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights translates to: According to Learn Tshiluba (Mofeko):