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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Culture / Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma (43287 Views)
Caribbean Indigenes Speak Igbo & Yoruba Languages / How Do I Say I Wan Fuk In Hausa And Yoruba Languages? / Choose Between Hausa, Yoruba, And Igbo Language (2) (3) (4)
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by iHustle(m): 7:05am On Oct 01, 2011 |
Some investigators have revealed that the Ancient Egyptians were blacks. Antiquites tell the same story. The human family is ONE BLOOD. Myopia makes us racists/tribalists. ANCIENT EGYPTIAN | IGBO (Onitsha and Uburu dialects used) | YORUBA KAKA(God) | Ka (greater, superior) | Ga (high,tall), Oga (master, superior) Khu (to kill, death) | Nwu/Gbu (die/to kill) | Ku (to die), Iku (death) Em (smell) | Imi/Emi (nose, associated with smell) | Imu (nose) Bi (to become) | Bu (to become) | Bi (give birth) un (living being) | Ndu (life) | Eni (person) Feh (to go away) | Feh (to fly away) | Fo (fly) Budo (dwelling place) | Obodo/ubudo (country, dwelling place) | Ibi (here), N'Ibo? (where?) Dudu (black image of Osiris) | Mmadu (person) | Dudu(black,dark) Un (living person) | Ulo/Uno (living area, house) | Ile (house) Beka (pray/confess) | Biko/Beko (to plead, please) | Bebe (to plead) Aru (mouth) | Onu (mouth) & kooh/Kwue (to speak) | Enu (mouth) Dor (settlement) | Dor-Nor (sit down, settle) | Duro (wait) Ra -Shu (light after darkness) | La -Shu (sleep) | Isun (sleep) Aru (rise) | Anu/Kulie (up, rise) | Dide (stand up, rise) Wu (rise) | KWu-ni/Kunie (rise) In- n (negation) | nh-n (negation) Ma (to know) | Ma, Ma-li (to know) | Mo ( to know) Se (to create) | Ke (to create) & Se (to draw) | Se (to do) Hoo (rejoice) | Goo, ta-Goo (dance, rejoice) | Jo (to dance) Omijener (deep water) | Ime-me (deep inside) | Omi (water), Jina (far) Nen (the primeval water mother) | Nem (mother) Ro (talk) | Kwo (to talk) | Oro (word, speech), S'oro (talk) Penka (divide) | Panje (break it) | Pin (to share) Ala (Land of) | Ala (Land of, ground, boundary) | Ile (land), Ilu (land of, town, country) Amu (children) | Umu (children) | Omo (children) Ani (ground land below) | Ani (ground land below) | Ni (to own) Ka (higher) | Ka (greater, higher, stronger, above) | Ga (greater, higher, stronger, above) Pa (open) | Meghee (open) | Fa (pull, stretch), Faya (tear) Isi (leader) | Isi (leader, head (body part), female name as in igbo: "Isioma" | Ori (head) Oni (AE City) | Oni-tsha (Igbo City) Ikhenaten (name of a Pharaoh) | Ikh-em (Igbo name for a male representing high power) | Iki (greeting, salutation), Ki (to greet, to salute, to hail) Au-nu (Crocodile) | Anu/Anu-Ma-nu (animal, beast) Miri (water) | Miri (water) | Omi (water), Mimo (holy, pure) Nahasu (other Blacks) | Ahasi/Ani-hasi (Evening, night) | Ale (night) Ak (man) | Ok-a (man) | Okunrin (man) Ehn/Hen (yes, nod head) | Eh (yes, nod head) | Ehn Ehn? (really?), Ehn (yes) Paa/Faa (fly) | Feeh/Faa (fly) | Fo (fly) Utcha (dawn) | Uchi-chi/Utchi-chi(night) MM (among) | Imme (inside, among) | Inu (inside, among) W (they) | Uwe (they, them) | Awon (they, them), Awa (us) | Ewu (goat) | Ewure (goat) | Nti (ear) | Eti (ear) | La/Lawa (go) | Lo (go) | N'Ebee (where) | N'Ibo (where) | N'Eban (here) | N'IBibai (here) | Kele (greet) | Ki (greet) Igbo, Albanian: mua Edo: me Yoruba: emi English: me French: moi Spanish, Italian, Portuguese: me German: mir Swahili: mimi Czech: mě Danish: mig Dutch, Icelandic: me Croatian: mene Finnish: minua Serbian: meHe Romanian: mă Igbo: gini Edo: vbo khin Yoruba: kini Ga (Ghana): mini Swahili: nini English: what German: was |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Yeske2(m): 7:12am On Oct 01, 2011 |
iHustle: |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Yeske2(m): 7:15am On Oct 01, 2011 |
iHustle:Wow that was a good one but can you post any link, would like to know more dwelling place) | Ibi (here), N'Ibo? (where?) Dudu (black image of Osiris) | Mmadu (person) | Dudu(black,dark) Un (living person) | Ulo/Uno (living area, house) | Ile (house) Beka (pray/confess) | Biko/Beko (to plead, please) | Bebe (to plead) Aru (mouth) | Onu (mouth) & kooh/Kwue (to speak) | Enu (mouth) Dor (settlement) | Dor-Nor (sit down, settle) | Duro (wait) Ra -Shu (light after darkness) | La -Shu (sleep) | Isun (sleep) Aru (rise) | Anu/Kulie (up, rise) | Dide (stand up, rise) Wu (rise) | KWu-ni/Kunie (rise) In- n (negation) | nh-n (negation) Ma (to know) | Ma, Ma-li (to know) | Mo ( to know) Se (to create) | Ke (to create) & Se (to draw) | Se (to do) Hoo (rejoice) | Goo, ta-Goo (dance, rejoice) | Jo (to dance) Omijener (deep water) | Ime-me (deep inside) | Omi (water), Jina (far) Nen (the primeval water mother) | Nem (mother) Ro (talk) | Kwo (to talk) | Oro (word, speech), S'oro (talk) Penka (divide) | Panje (break it) | Pin (to share) Ala (Land of) | Ala (Land of, ground, boundary) | Ile (land), Ilu (land of, town, country) Amu (children) | Umu (children) | Omo (children) Ani (ground land below) | Ani (ground land below) | Ni (to own) Ka (higher) | Ka (greater, higher, stronger, above) | Ga (greater, higher, stronger, above) Pa (open) | Meghee (open) | Fa (pull, stretch), Faya (tear) Isi (leader) | Isi (leader, head (body part), female name as in igbo: "Isioma" | Ori (head) Oni (AE City) | Oni-tsha (Igbo City) Ikhenaten (name of a Pharaoh) | Ikh-em (Igbo name for a male representing high power) | Iki (greeting, salutation), Ki (to greet, to salute, to hail) Au-nu (Crocodile) | Anu/Anu-Ma-nu (animal, beast) Miri (water) | Miri (water) | Omi (water), Mimo (holy, pure) Nahasu (other Blacks) | Ahasi/Ani-hasi (Evening, night) | Ale (night) Ak (man) | Ok-a (man) | Okunrin (man) Ehn/Hen (yes, nod head) | Eh (yes, nod head) | Ehn Ehn? (really?), Ehn (yes) Paa/Faa (fly) | Feeh/Faa (fly) | Fo (fly) Utcha (dawn) | Uchi-chi/Utchi-chi(night) MM (among) | Imme (inside, among) | Inu (inside, among) W (they) | Uwe (they, them) | Awon (they, them), Awa (us) | Ewu (goat) | Ewure (goat) | Nti (ear) | Eti (ear) | La/Lawa (go) | Lo (go) | N'Ebee (where) | N'Ibo (where) | N'Eban (here) | N'IBibai (here) | Kele (greet) | Ki (greet) Igbo, Albanian: mua Edo: me Yoruba: emi English: me French: moi Spanish, Italian, Portuguese: me German: mir Swahili: mimi Czech: mě Danish: mig Dutch, Icelandic: me Croatian: mene Finnish: minua Serbian: meHe Romanian: mă Igbo: gini Edo: vbo khin Yoruba: kini Ga (Ghana): mini Swahili: nini English: what German: was [quote][/quote]Wow that was a good one but can you post any link, would like to know more |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by iHustle(m): 7:32am On Oct 01, 2011 |
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Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Nobody: 8:54am On Oct 01, 2011 |
The commonest one I can remember is Yoruba - Kini Igbo. - Gini both meaning what |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by bioye(m): 3:29pm On Oct 01, 2011 |
Yoruba/Hausa/English Dukia/Dukia/Property Amo/Ama/But Yoruba/English Doti/Dirty ANCIENT EGYPTIAN | IGBO (Onitsha and Uburu dialects used) | YORUBA Budo (dwelling place) | Obodo/ubudo (country, dwelling place) | Ibudo |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by YoruIgbo(m): 8:09am On Oct 02, 2011 |
Igbo Yoruba Akara Akara (both mean Beans cake) Ori Ori (Local cream) Eti Nti (Ear) close but not same Enu Onu (Mouth) Imu Imi (Nose) |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by odumchi: 2:40pm On Oct 02, 2011 |
^^^ For the last 3, you Mixed up Igbo with Yoruba. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Texther(m): 6:55pm On Oct 02, 2011 |
YOR ENG sin sneeze Im coming back ooo |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by deadie(m): 10:51pm On Oct 02, 2011 |
Pure rubbish people trying to connect languages, especially Igbo and Yoruba. They are NOT related. Have they ever heard of coincidence? Out of tens of thousands of words, they can only find a few that sound or seem to have the same spelling and draw conclusions based on that. Three letter words, which they mostly quote often have multiple meanings: Oke = male Oke = rat Oke = boundary Oke = share Ike = strength Ike = buttocks Ike = to share Ike = to tie Ezi = pig Ezi = teach Ezi = outside Ezi (ziri ezi) = correct Most 3 letter words in Igbo have minimum of 3 meanings and this creates lots of probabilities to have coinciding words. I find[b] ZAMBIA[/b] more similar to Igbo. Here are some of their names Former president = Frederick CHILUBA (CHILUBA = God is working in Igbo) Other Zambian names are : Chibulu, Chibuluma, Chijikwa, Chilekwa, Chilemba, Chicheba, Chimana, Chimba, Chuma, Chuba, Chiwele, Dube, Hara, Harawa source: http://www.zambian.com/zambia/directory/names-zambia/html/zambia-names-c01.html There are other similar names, but the ones I listed above are 100% central Igbo names, and Igbo people will probably argue with you that no one who is not Igbo bears these names because they are pretty complex names. Most probably know Chuba (Okadigbo). Absolute bull-crap drawing conclusion based on 3 letter words as they mostly did for comparing Igbo and other Nigerian languages. 1 Like |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by activist11(m): 12:09am On Oct 03, 2011 |
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Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by odumchi: 12:53am On Oct 03, 2011 |
^^^ It's all linguistics. Remember the Yoruba and Igbo languages are different but there is a distinct relationship. Languages in this family use "m" as a possessive article such as "mo" in Igbo and "mi" in Yoruba. Another example is "umu" in Igbo and "omo" both meaning children. I think that they both originated or atleast were heavily influenced by another language long ago. Possibly that spoken at Nok. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by jmoore(m): 8:27am On Feb 08, 2012 |
Hausa | Igbo shinkafa=rice osikapa=rice Yoruba | Igbo Okuta=stone/rock Okute=stone/rock Remember Abeokuta? we are one!!! |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by gst101: 10:55pm On Apr 14, 2012 |
it is not true to say that the idoma people are related to the igbos just becos some words sound alike. It is important to know that there are more words that are dissimilar than there are similar words. There are more hausa influence in idoma than igbos similarity and the igalas have the most similarities with idoma than any other tribe. That is not so suprising any way becos the two tribes are brothers. We even bear the same names eg: Idoko, Omale, Ojoh, Omele, Iganya, Okoh, Ochai, Ogbe, Ele etc. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by gst101: 11:32pm On Apr 14, 2012 |
becos few words are similar does not mean two tribes are related. It is important to note that there are thousands of dissimilar word in the two languages. If few similar word draw two tribes together, then thousands of dissimilar words should also make clear the difference. 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Findingmyroots: 9:36am On Jul 20, 2013 |
Some of the Yorubas are igbos. Such as the Egba people from Abeokuta and the Akure people. I once heard that YORUBA is actually a Hausa word And that the origin of Yoruba actually come from Kwara state. Like one said in an earlier post. It's time for tribes to start discovering their connections. It will only bring us closer. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Findingmyroots: 9:39am On Jul 20, 2013 |
gst101: becos few words are similar does not mean two tribes are related. It is important to note that there are thousands of dissimilar word in the two languages. If few similar word draw two tribes together, then thousands of dissimilar words should also make clear the difference. It's more than just a few words. The Idoma also share the same market days. They hv a local government called OBI. And according to history, the Arochukwus(igbos)once occupied Idoma land bcuz they were the last Igbo migrators to migrate to Southeastern Nigeria. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by somegirl1: 11:46pm On Jul 22, 2013 |
Maawitemi: Saturday Tribune Sunday Tribune Many of the supposedly "Igbo" words used in this article were fabricated by the author. Our languages mustn't be similar. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by macof(m): 12:53am On Aug 10, 2013 |
Findingmyroots: Some of the Yorubas are igbos. Such as the Egba people from Abeokuta and the Akure people. Yes the name Yoruba was given by Hausa/fulani because there was a time the two race were in war and that was when Ibadan and Oyo stood together due to this team up the fulani called the Oyo and Ibadan Yoruba and it soon became a name for all others like akure, Ekiti, owu, ijebu, ijesa, awori etc. And wat is this you are saying about some yorubas being igbo? Pls don't be stupid, all Yoruba towns trace their origin from ile-ife and Oyo(due to the high population of refugees during the war against Hausa/fulani). Yoruba did not come from kwara state, major parts of kwara came from Oyo, well the rest are ancient Nupe. You really don't know anything about Yoruba 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by macof(m): 1:13am On Aug 10, 2013 |
EzeCanada: Yoruba Igbo English Orisa refers to Yoruba gods/deities or what is better placed as angels of God tho worshipped in traditional Yoruba religion called aborisa, the Yoruba name for supreme God is Olodumare or Olorun who is the creator of everything and Baba Awon Orisa(father of all orisa). Esu is not the devil, he is an orisa that is very important to Yoruba people, people just call him devil for greedy and selfish desire to downgrade Yoruba and uplift foreign religion but now so many Yoruba who don't know the religion use his name badly. Ase means command and life energy tho used to empower prayer. Ifa is not mere casting of lots it is a way to interact with the god of wisdom and prophecy(orunmila) |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Nobody: 5:15am On Mar 01, 2015 |
In Yoruba, Agogo does not mean secret o. Correct me if I'm wrong. In both hausa and yoruba AGOGO means clock. However in hausa; there are different types of agogo. E.g AGOGOn hannu means wrist watch, AGOGOn bango means wall clock e.t.c |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Ilekeh(f): 5:19am On Mar 01, 2015 |
macof: Thank you. I tell people this all the time. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Ilekeh(f): 5:20am On Mar 01, 2015 |
Findingmyroots: You're obviously high on something brown and igboish |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by tpiah01: 7:01am On Mar 01, 2015 |
. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by 19naia(m): 7:25am On Mar 03, 2015 |
Vous in french is cognatively similar to saying Iwo(you) in youruba.. W and V are very commonly substituted in words among world languages around the world,, Also B is substituted for V often... Russians substitute W for V and spanish speakers substitute B for V, they sometimes pronounce Vos as Bos... Chinese say "se se ni" in the same way yoruba say "se da da ni".. As a greeting to ask of well being status.. Chinese dialect also says "O da ni" just like yoruba say "O da" and they mean "its good" or " its ok", in chinese and in yoruba.. The word Okari is an old Japanese word related to the japanese word Oka.. It is similar in meaning to the word Okurin in yoruba.. There are more similarities.. When looking at the transmorphology of languages, its good to know that meaning can stray a bit but remain similar, as well as the phonemes and intonations over time... Duro is a word in yoruba and also in Spanish and even a transmorphed form in english -Endure. I know in yoruba "Duro" means stop or wait.. In spanish "Duro" means strong or resistant.. In english "Endure" means also to resist or remain strong... Another way to interprete strong or endurance or resistance is "Staying power" "Waits through the forces that would erode or destroy or send it away.... So it is poetically related to staying and waiting through something... Interpretation has a poetic way about it.. Even in English alone, the old shakespearian text have a dialectic and poetic rendition of vocabulary that is not the same as todays english... Todays english is far from what it was 500 years ago.. The same may be true for many languages... If you practice literal translations of phrases and words from one language to another, the poetry becomes clear.. Ebi pa mi" hunger is killing me".. In english that seems extreme.. Simply said, I am hungry.. No need reference the word of killing or death. But poetically, hunger is an avenue to death if not taken seriously and the world generally associates death by hunger with africa.. Is it poetic that yoruba africans associate death with the proclamation of hunger? Adura is prayer in yoruba ;and in India, their form of prayer is a meditation and they have a word for it "Dua" or Adua". I believe this word is also related to Duro and Endure, because the meaning of prayer is fundamentally rooted in a practice to give strength, resistance and staying power, to help us wait through the trials of our living... The meanings are in a poetic relationship and so are the phonemes f0r the most part.. Cognates... The relationship between languages traverses the entire world. African words in part and peices are found all over the world.. Also the artifacts and bones of african ancenstors as old as 50-60 thousand years, even in the american continent.. Consider that every language will have an old dialect such as shakespearian english differs from modern english and has words not used any more. They would say "hither to" in place of " there to".. They would say Thou and thee in place of you and vous... Explore this: RLNDTSZ MBPFVW YJGK cqxh AEIOU.. That is the entire alphabet put in phonetic family order.. This means that the letter groups are divided in a way of oral formation relationship.. The mouth configuration to make R is the same as to make L and N,D,T,S and Z.. The tip of the tounge goes to the front of the upper palate right above the front top teeth.. Keep the tounge there and see if you can recite all the letters without changeing the mouth.. The tounge will stay the same except it will loosen back for R and press down more for T rather than D.. Also Z will have the tounge press down more rather than for S.. M,B and P are made woth the lips and then F replaces P in some langauages and even in english.. Then F and V are made with the same teeth to lip configuration of the mouth.. And so they are groups with the other lip formed letters M,B,P .. Y,J are often substituted in languages and almost the same phonates by way of oral formation.. Mashing the tounge across the entire upper palate and exerting out the phonation..J presses down more than Y.. Just like B presses the lips more than P and Z presses the toungs tip more than for S.. Same with T and D.. The japanes substitute D for T very often and its hard to distinguish many of their uses of T from Uses of D.. c,q,x are redundancies in the phonetic scheme and "h" is universal and unique ,almost standing with the vowels, but too silent to be a solid vowel or a robust consonant.. This phonate and phoneme theory is very important for deciphering and finding relationship between langauages.. Langauages that used to be one common, diverged in form as people diverged and parted ways.. Some times one goes one way with the B letter in a word and they start to press down less on the lips or evolve smaller lips until such a word like Baba becomes Papa... Or a word like Dada becomes Tata.. Because D and T are the same formation in the mouth but one is a softer expression than the other... Like the word wine comes from vin whch is related to the word for Vine which is the decriptin of the grape plants that wine is made from.. The V substituted with W as t travels cros culturally to other peoples mouths... The word "Is" phonates like "IZ" because of the same formation used for the two, but one is a softer expression of the other.. The harsh winter alone can make phonetics change ,like in cases that the lips freeze and crack and so the speaker doesnt press so much to form lip phonates.. So, cold weather people would be better saying papa, and warm weather would say Baba with more ease. Try going to siberia in the winter and speaking in the sub-zero cold, it will put a dent in you phonetics as you try to find efficiency to protect your mouth and lungs from the cold, Another reason why they dont like to pronouce V in the coldest environments, so they say W in place of it.. I have been in 17 different countries so far and listened to more than 22 languages and then some added dialects, to learn the phonetic and phonemic flow of the languages and see the phonetic substitution schemes they often make... Language relationship is very complex to track, but it becomes easier when you know these tools and also consider the missing link of extinct or less used dialects...even english uses Dialects, like the old shakespearean english is an old dialect and similar to whats used to word the english bible... The dialectics help bridge difficult translations between some languages, because the poetic renditions of one language may only match an older dialect of the other... 2 Likes |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by tpiah01: 7:29am On Mar 03, 2015 |
Vous in french is from a latin/italic prototype, vos. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by sherlock229(m): 10:35am On Feb 25, 2016 |
iHustle: Stop trying to force it, Igbos are not related to Yoruba, Yoruba igala and itsekiri can be better compared to ancient Egypt language with good accuracy, just try it. Compare those 3 yoruboid languages with ancient Egypt language,and you will see zero difference. |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by Konquest: 7:12pm On Feb 14, 2018 |
olawalebabs:^^^^^^ About 40% of Spanish words are derived from Arabic as well. The Berber/Arabs invaded Spain via North Africa and were there for over 700 years till 1492 when the indigenous Spanish forces allied with the Portuguese pushed them out militarily and attained victory! |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by sherlock229(m): 1:03pm On Apr 04, 2018 |
not new. fulfude/yoruba /english jodo. joko. sit. min. mi. me. war. wa. come etc......... |
Re: Similar Words Between Hausa/yoruba Languages And That Of Igbo/idoma by SoldierPikin: 3:32am On Nov 11, 2019 |
Many Nigerian languages are related or shares a comon influence. When you examine the language of the ethnic groups around the confluence it beceomes obvious. Oruka or "ring"in Yoruba is Erika in Idoma language. Mallam or "teacher" in Hausa is Omale in both Igala and Idoma languages Also don't confuse ORIGIN with LANGUAGE. The fact tht we use English language doesnt us englishmen. |
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