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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil (43517 Views)
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Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by realjoker(m): 5:47am On May 02, 2015 |
Etymology As an ethnic description, the word "Yoruba" was first recorded in reference to the Oyo Empire in a treatise written by the 16th-century Songhai scholar Ahmed Baba. It was popularized by Hausa usage and ethnography written in Arabic and Ajami during the 19th century, in origin referring to the Oyo exclusively. The extension of the term to all speakers of dialects related to the language of the Oyo (in modern terminology North-West Yoruba) dates to the second half of the 19th century. It is due to the influence of Samuel Ajayi Crowther, the first Anglican bishop in Nigeria. Crowther was himself a Yoruba and compiled the first Yoruba dictionary as well as introducing a standard for Yoruba orthography. The alternative name Akú, apparently an exonym derived from the first words of Yoruba greetings (such as Ẹ kú àárọ? "good morning", Ẹ kú alẹ? "good evening" has survived in certain parts of their diaspora as a self-descriptive, especially in Sierra Leone |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 5:48am On May 02, 2015 |
People love mythologies 2. We had our own mythology, our own gods and goddesses to protect us a) akin to the Greeks, we had our own mythology https://www.pinterest.com/cosmiqueen/yoruba-orishas/ 3 Likes
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Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Athanatos(m): 5:48am On May 02, 2015 |
madamoringo:. Why should I? Its good news and it calls for celebration. But most of you go along thinking we have time to hate on other people's successes. All the average Igbo man knows is to mind his own business,so don't go thinking we're having heart attacks simply because people want to reconnect with their places of origin. Be mature ma'am. My 2 kobo. |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Nobody: 5:48am On May 02, 2015 |
Nna mehn ndi Yoruba sabi how to be ugly o Kai I hope they won't pick teachers from Ogun state The aircraft may not handle this 1 Like 2 Shares
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Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by TheOtherview: 5:49am On May 02, 2015 |
Ilekeh: 2 Likes
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Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 5:52am On May 02, 2015 |
We had feared empires 1 Like
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Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by ireneidiva(f): 5:54am On May 02, 2015 |
babyosisi:You are bigger than this na. Let 2 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by ireneidiva(f): 5:54am On May 02, 2015 |
babyosisi:You are bigger than this na. Let yoruba people celebrate. |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Nobody: 5:54am On May 02, 2015 |
1 Like
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Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 5:55am On May 02, 2015 |
ireneidiva: When she starts faking her "this is great! congrats Nigeria" B.S. It's easy to force her to show her true pain 8 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by ireneidiva(f): 5:56am On May 02, 2015 |
babyosisi:This is just too childish of you. We are all Nigerians first before being igbo or yoruba. No tribe is superior. So please grow up. 14 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Athanatos(m): 5:57am On May 02, 2015 |
Ilekeh:I hate the way this topic is going.... What's the big deal? Yoruba people in Brazil want yoruba teachers over there. That's good news,but not a reason to start insulting an entire race. Nobody insulted Yorubas this time. Y'all started it! |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Nobody: 5:58am On May 02, 2015 |
Athanatos: So you saw it? I for say |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 5:58am On May 02, 2015 |
We had the artwork We have several Museums dedicated to the Yoruba culture, artwork, and tradition https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/artists/520/Yoruba http://africa.uima.uiowa.edu/peoples/show/Yoruba http://www.fieldmuseum.org/science/microsites/museum-loan-network/museum-loan-network-grant-collections/museum-loan-network-2 http://www.fowler.ucla.edu/category/keywords/yoruba https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hi/hi_owoyoruba.htm 3 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Truckpusher(m): 5:59am On May 02, 2015 |
Ilekeh:come teach me abeg. Languages with this level of importance are easily grasped when taught by the opposite sex in a serene environment and on a nice bed. 2 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by jasper83: 6:00am On May 02, 2015 |
Mapletraks: Yet some people will still argue blindly that Lagos is a no mans land( an empty vast of land the Britons discovered). 5 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Athanatos(m): 6:00am On May 02, 2015 |
babyosisi:Nne,wetuo obi. I understand the way you feel,but this is not the best way to reply,believe me. Biko rapu ewu na ata igu ka o talu igu gaba. |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 6:00am On May 02, 2015 |
Athanatos: Anything Yoruba insults that entire race (Igbo). Pretending to be satisfied with Yoruba progress is temporary. And this is progress....any unification of Yorubas from different corners of the earth is progress. Yorubas need to bank on it. 12 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by jaskoko: 6:01am On May 02, 2015 |
oodua agbewa o,a see 2 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Truckpusher(m): 6:01am On May 02, 2015 |
TheOtherview:You obviously think that I'm that jobless for ethnic bashing though in politics section any thing could be used to bash Oya continue waiting for me. Olodo. |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 6:01am On May 02, 2015 |
Truckpusher: Yimu. Ask babyosisi to help you. She's been learning Yoruba in that environment 3 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Athanatos(m): 6:01am On May 02, 2015 |
jasper83: Grow up. |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Bifwoli: 6:02am On May 02, 2015 |
khalleb: But their faces don't quite sell as well they have scary features.Just in physical attractiveness Yorubas fall far behind Igbos,Hausas ,Fulanis,Knuris and Ijaws. |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Truckpusher(m): 6:02am On May 02, 2015 |
Ilekeh: 1 Like
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Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 6:02am On May 02, 2015 |
I could even start a mini Yoruba town in Brazil, Cuba, Haiti, Dominican Republic etc. Jeeezzzzzz money! |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 6:04am On May 02, 2015 |
2 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 6:05am On May 02, 2015 |
Tourism in Yorubaland is enough to generate revenue equivalent to Oil (or close) Everybody is infatuated with the Yoruba language. Second to Swahili. 8 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by realjoker(m): 6:05am On May 02, 2015 |
Yoruba language The Yoruba culture was originally an oral tradition, and the majority of Yoruba people are native speakers of the Yoruba language. The number of speakers is roughly estimated at about 30 million in 2010. Yoruba is classified within the Edekiri languages, which together with the isolate Igala, form the Yoruboid group of languages within the Volta-Niger branch of the Niger-Congo family. Igala and Yoruba have important historical and cultural relationships. The languages of the two ethnic groups bear such a close resemblance that researchers such as Forde (1951) and Westermann and Bryan (1952) regarded Igala as a dialect of Yoruba. The Yoruboid languages are assumed to have developed out of an undifferentiated Volta-Niger group by the 1st millennium BCE. There are three major dialect areas: Northwest, Central, and Southeast. As the North-West Yoruba dialects show more linguistic innovation, combined with the fact that Southeast and Central Yoruba areas generally have older settlements, suggests a later date of immigration for Northwest Yoruba. The area where North-West Yoruba (NWY) is spoken corresponds to the historical Oyo Empire. South-East Yoruba (SEY) was probably associated with the expansion of the Benin Empire after c. 1450. Central Yoruba forms a transitional area in that the lexicon has much in common with NWY, whereas it shares many ethnographical features with SEY. Literary Yoruba, the standard variety learnt at school and spoken by newsreaders on the radio, has its origin in the Yoruba grammar compiled in the 1850s by Bishop Samuel Ajayi Crowther. Though for a large part based on the Oyo and Ibadan dialects, it incorporates several features from other dialects. History History of the Yoruba people are from Ife Yoruba mythology As of the 7th century BCE the African peoples who lived in Yorubaland, were not initially known as the Yoruba, although they shared a common ethnicity and language group. The historical Yoruba develop in situ, out of earlier Mesolithic Volta-Niger populations, by the 1st millennium BCE.Oral history recorded under the Oyo Empire derives the Yoruba as an ethnic group from the population of the older kingdom of Ile-Ife. Archaeologically, the settlement at Ifeshows features of urbanism in the 12th - 14th century era. In the period around 1300 C.E. the artists at Ife developed arefined and naturalistic sculptural tradition in terracotta, stone and copper alloy - copper, brass, and bronze many of which appear to have been created under the patronage of King Obalufon II, the man who today is identified as the Yoruba patron deity of brass casting, weaving and regalia.The dynasty of kings at Ife, which regarded the Yoruba as the place of origin of human civilization, remains intact to this day. The urban phase of Ife before the rise of Oyo, c. 1100–1600, a significant peak of political centralization in the 12th century) is commonly described as a "golden age" of Ife. The oba or ruler of Ife is referred to as the Ooni of Ife. Ife continues to be seen as the "spiritual homeland" of the Yoruba. The city was surpassed by the Oyo Empire as the dominant Yoruba military and political power in the 17th century. The Oyo Empire under its oba, known as the Alaafin of Oyo, was active in the African slave trade during the 18th century. The Yoruba often demanded slaves as a form of tribute of subject populations, who in turn sometimes made war on other peoples to capture the required slaves. Part of the slaves sold by the Oyo Empire entered the Atlantic slave trade. Most of the city states were controlled by Obas (or royal sovereigns with various individual titles) and councils made up of Oloyes, recognised leaders of royal, noble and, often, even common descent, who joined them in ruling over the kingdoms through a series of guilds and cults. Different states saw differing ratios of power between the kingships and the chiefs' councils. Some, such as Oyo, had powerful, autocratic monarchs with almost total control, while in others such as the Ijebu city-states, the senatorial councils held more influence and the power of the ruler or Ọba, referred to as the Awujale of Ijebuland, was more limited. Yoruba settlements are often described as primarily one or more of the main social groupings called "generations" The "first generation" includes towns and cities known as original capitals of founding Yoruba kingdoms or states. The "second generation" consists of settlements created by conquest. The "third generation" consists of villages and municipalities that emerged following the internecine wars of the 19th century. 3 Likes |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Ilekeh(f): 6:06am On May 02, 2015 |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Truckpusher(m): 6:06am On May 02, 2015 |
Ilekeh:This aunty can lie for Africa 1 Like |
Re: FG To Send Yoruba Teachers To Brazil by Athanatos(m): 6:06am On May 02, 2015 |
Ilekeh: So banking on it means calling Igbos names? You're more mature than this na! I'm Igbo and this is good news...I don't see anything in it that would cut my life short. So what are you saying? Its good that a Nigerian language is being propagated elsewhere. Even us Igbos have our brothers in Trinidad and Tobago. Ghanaians have ties with Jamaica. Its nothing new please,stop making stratospheres out of molehills. My 2 kobo. 1 Like |
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