In several Bantu languages − including
Kirundi,
Kinyarwanda,
Fuliiru,
Nande,
Lega,
Luhya,
Nyindu,
Shi, and
Chitonga − the word
mwami means "
tribal chief". It is used as a title for the leader of
tribal societies or
chiefdoms in areas where those languages are spoken. In addition,
mwami means either "chief" or "
husband" in
Luganda. It is used as a title for administrative chief in Luganda-speaking chiefdoms around the
African Great Lakes region, though it can also be used as a general honorific for men, similar to English
Mr. Traditional chiefs of the
Lenje and the
Ila people of
Zambia, and the
Tonga people of Zambia and Zimbabwe also use the honorific. ==Etymology==