Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,524 members, 7,819,883 topics. Date: Tuesday, 07 May 2024 at 04:56 AM

Chakula's Posts

Nairaland Forum / Chakula's Profile / Chakula's Posts

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (of 96 pages)

Politics / Re: Pictures From PDP Nasarawa Guber Campaign Flag Off In Toto LGA by chakula: 7:11am On Nov 30, 2022
Papas everywhere.
Travel / Re: Corruption In The Nigerian International Passport Process (Video) by chakula: 1:44pm On Nov 24, 2022
Curruption is the most workable tool that remains the nation united.

1 Like

Travel / Re: Traffic Advisory: Lagos Women's Run Holds November 12th, 2022 (Tomorrow). by chakula: 9:46am On Nov 11, 2022
Wishing them success till end.
Foreign Affairs / Re: U.S. Inflation Drops To 7.7% In October by chakula: 8:25pm On Nov 10, 2022
They are very strategic in whatever they plan. We are waiting for Our Darling Country to reveal the extend in which inflation level is currently.

1 Like

Business / Re: Ghana’s Inflation Hits 40.4% In October 2022 by chakula: 6:47pm On Nov 10, 2022
Their own problem.
Travel / Re: Man Dies In Motor Accident Two Days After His Wedding In Kaduna (Photos) by chakula: 10:41am On Nov 09, 2022
May Allah forgive his Sin.

2 Likes

Foreign Affairs / Re: UK PM: Boris Johnson Withdraws From Race As Rishi Sunak Tipped To Succeed Truss by chakula: 9:55pm On Oct 23, 2022
FaceTanke:
Is he Indian?

His name sound like that of Indians.

2 Likes

Islam for Muslims / Re: A Great Gift To The Daughter Of Prophet And Lessons To All Muslims by chakula: 3:26pm On Oct 14, 2022
Alhamdulillah.

4 Likes 1 Share

Politics / Re: Wike Says Rent Seekers Frustrating Peace Efforts In PDP by chakula: 10:00pm On Oct 13, 2022
Waiting patiently and see how can a single individual destroy the whole and mighty PDP structure.

3 Likes 1 Share

Education / Re: Zulum Embarrassed As JSS Students Can’t Write, Read. by chakula: 10:34pm On Oct 08, 2022
nkemjacob2:
Y is he surprised. The senior class are even the worst. I was grading bornu waec script. My dear friend Come & see rubbish. Tell me y won't politicians use for their selfish interest

Bros, measuring their performance in grading waec remain equal with their counterpart from the other side of the country. I came across to the student (Sourther /Easterner) who boldly beg for assistance in his booklet that his parents spent all their earnings for his success. I should kindly assist.
Crime / Re: Marwa: Possession Of Cannabis Is A Crime, But We Do Not Criminalise Ordinary Use by chakula: 10:01pm On Oct 07, 2022
What is the correlation between America and Nigeria? Nigeria is not America learn to deliver what will be the benefit to the masses.
Politics / Re: Kogi Government Moves To Recover Obajana Cement Company From Dangote by chakula: 7:55am On Oct 07, 2022
They don't think their tenure is about to elapse and the person in question will make the deal with in coming administration which upon receiving their share things will normalise.

2 Likes 1 Share

Politics / Re: Sanwo-Olu Announces Salary Increment For Lagos Public Service (Video) by chakula: 2:35pm On Oct 04, 2022
These people are clever grin than their counterparts. They will make it possible to win the hearts of the Lagos civil servant. Anyway congrats to the beneficiaries.
Politics / Re: NNPCL Has Spends ₦54 Billion On Ailing Refineries In Seven Months by chakula: 3:11pm On Sep 28, 2022
You can only understand the figures when you get there.
Romance / Re: Man Shares Message He Received From His House Cleaner Who Was Asking Him Out by chakula: 10:34pm On Sep 26, 2022
They are both created by God and nothing like superiority among them God can do as He wishes any day or any time. No Condition is permanent.

1 Like

Travel / Re: Accident Caused Gridlock On Kaduna-Abuja Highway. Travelers Stranded For 48 Hrs by chakula: 8:48pm On Sep 22, 2022
According to the news the accident had happened Wednesday night so the calculation is very wrong because up to now the hours spent in the gridlock is only limited for 27 hours.
Politics / Re: Aisha Yesufu Analysis Of Peter Obi Chances Of Winning The Presidential Election by chakula: 9:10pm On Sep 21, 2022
Truthdeypain:


She did mention him, you fool perhaps you need some data to watch the video.

You don't need to display your home training in public rather than holding it within your family circle. Kindly learn to respect others view especially in the forum that gather different calibre of people.
Jobs/Vacancies / Re: How Can I Tell My Boss That I Want To Quit by chakula: 2:42pm On Sep 21, 2022
As you wrote the first application.
Politics / Re: Aisha Yesufu Analysis Of Peter Obi Chances Of Winning The Presidential Election by chakula: 2:29pm On Sep 21, 2022
Unserious women. Had it been you mentioned Tinubu as a champion in the southwest then I will reason with you.
Romance / Re: Men Stop Taking Random Girls To Your House by chakula: 2:01pm On Sep 20, 2022
She can't exceeded her appointed time. Take her home or hotel if you like

3 Likes

Sports / Re: World Athletics Ratifies Tobi Amusan's Hurdles World Record by chakula: 1:59pm On Sep 20, 2022
Congrats Sister.

3 Likes

Jobs/Vacancies / Re: How Do You Feel When Your Friend Becomes Your Boss by chakula: 1:35pm On Sep 20, 2022
I can work with him as a boss when we are outside our friendship can stand firm.
Celebrities / Re: BBNaija's Angel Goes Braless And Pantless In New Hot Photos by chakula: 12:10pm On Sep 03, 2022
Future mother.what do you expect from her?
Culture / 20 Hausa Words In Everyday Nigerian English by chakula: 9:27pm On Aug 27, 2022
See 20 Nigerian English—and Nigerian Pidgin English— expressions that owe debts to the Hausa language.


Since 2015, every August 26 has been observed as “Hausa Day” (or “Ranar Hausa” in the Hausa language) by Hausa-speaking people all over the world. In honour of this day, I highlight 20 Nigerian English—and Nigerian Pidgin English— expressions that owe debts to the Hausa language

As with every language that leaves its primordial shores, the Hausa words that make it to Nigerian English are often contorted from their original forms and meanings.

1. “Jaara.” Most speakers of Nigerian English recognize this word as an additional, often small, quantity that a merchant gives to a customer who purchases goods in the market as a show of appreciation for the customer’s business. It is derived from the Hausa “gyara.”

The word’s corruption to “jaara” in Nigerian (Pidgin) English) is a consequence of the absence of the Hausa phoneme “gy” in most Nigerian languages.

Interestingly, in the U.S. state of Louisiana, when I lived for almost two years before moving to Georgia, people use the term “lagniappe” (pronounced Lan-Yap) to signify what Hausa people call “gyara” and that Nigerian English speakers call “jaara.”

No other part of the United States has a culture of merchants giving a small gift to their customers after a transaction. I once speculated that the Louisiana “lagniappe” culture may be traceable to enslaved Hausa people in the state hundreds of years ago.

2. “Babban riga.” The resplendent, broad-sleeved, flowing gown that has now become the attire of choice of Nigerian politicians of all ethnicities is often called “babban riga” in Nigerian English. It’s a slight distortion of “babbar riga,” its Hausa name.

3. “Megad.” This Nigerian English word for what native English speakers call a door guard, a gatekeeper, a uniformed doorman, or a hall porter came to us from a distortion of the Hausa “maigadi,” itself a blend of the Hausa “mai” and the English “guard.”

The fact that most doorkeepers in Nigerian urban centers used to be—probably still are—Hausa or Hausa-speaking northerners helped to admit “megad” into the pantheon of unique Nigerian English expressions.


4. “Buka.” This word now means a cheap, casual, ramshackle eatery that sells already prepared food. It came from the Hausa word “bukka,” which means a temporary, tumble-down hut or tent.

Since most roadside or dirt-cheap eateries in Nigeria used tents (many don’t these days), Nigerians neologized the word “bukateria” from “bukka” on the model of cafeteria, itself an American English word borrowed from Spanish.

5. “Burantashi.” Most Nigerians know this word to be the Hausa word for an aphrodisiac, that is, the bitter herbal concoction that reputedly stimulates sexual desire in men. “Bura” is the Hausa word for the male reproductive organ and “tashi” is the Hausa word for rising, waking up, etc. Curiously, however, the word “buratashi” (which is probably how it would have been written in Hausa if it were a thing) is more used outside Hausa land than in Hausa land.

In everyday conversational Hausa, at least among Hausa Muslims, “bura” is rarely used except in vulgar insults such as “bura uban ka/ki” (which is now rendered as “borobanka” in some varieties of Nigerian Pidgin English).

I’m genuinely curious how “burantashi” came to be if it’s almost absent in the demotic repertoire of native Hausa speakers. Hausa people call aphrodisiacs “maganin karfin maza” or “gagi.”

6. “Fadama.” This Hausa word for a fertile wetland is now a widely used terminology in agriculture in Nigeria and beyond.

7. “Do guy.” To “do guy” in Nigerian English is to preen, to show off with elaborate sartorial care. That expression owes provenance to the Hausa “gayu,” where it means the same thing. A dandy is called “dan gaye” or “dan danyu” in Hausa.

But it seems like there is a circular sociolinguistic loop in the emergence of this expression from Hausa to Nigerian English. Since “gayu” itself doesn’t seem to be native to Hausa, it’s reasonable to assume that it’s a loan to the language from the English “guy.”

Guy means an adult male in English, and men who wore shirts and trousers (as opposed to the more common Hausa attires of kaftans and babbar riga) were referred to as “guys.” So, “guy” might have changed meaning from just being men attired in Western clothes to dandies, from where it made its way to Nigerian Pidgin English and later to Nigerian English to simply mean preening.

8. “Long leg,” the Nigerian English idiomatic expression for connections (which even Wole Soyinka used in one of this iconic plays) is said to be the direct translation of the Hausa dogon-kafa. Dogon-kafa can mean long-established, and it can colloquially mean (unfair) advantages that come with knowing people in high places.


9. “Kaya mata” or “kayamata” (which native Hausa speakers would write as “kayan mata”) has come to mean sexual stimulant for women and is now widely known by that name in southern Nigeria.

10. “Mudu,” the unit of measurement that most Nigerians use in the market, is a Hausa word.

11. To “see gobe” in southern Nigeria is to be in trouble, sometimes good trouble. It’s the title of Davido’s 2013 hit song. It may have been derived from the Hausa “sai gobe,” which literally translates as “until tomorrow.” I am also curious to know how the semantic transition occurred from “until tomorrow” to “being in trouble.”

12. “Suya” literally means frying in Hausa, but it has become the name for barbecued meat in Nigeria, which Hausa people call “tsire.” Since most non-Hausa Nigerians can’t faithfully pronounce the phoneme “ts” in Hausa, it’s entirely possible that Hausa tsire sellers encouraged the popularization of suya, an easier word to pronounce among non-Hausa-speaking people.

13. “Dogon yaro” (which literally means tall child) is the Hausa word for neem tree, but it is almost universally known by that name in Nigeria.

14. “Wahala.” Although “wahala” is an Arabic word, it came to Nigerian (Pidgin) English most likely through Hausa. It’s derived from the Arabic “wahla,” which means fright or terror, and is now firmly established in most Nigerian languages—and in the West African Pidgin English spoken in Nigeria, Ghana, and Cameroon

15. “Waaka.” In Nigerian Pidgin English, “waaka” is a popular insult often uttered in moments of extreme exasperation with all five fingers stretched out. It’s a corruption of the Hausa “uwar ka” (male) “uwar ki” (female). Uwa means “mother” in Hausa, so “uwar ka” is “your mother!”

16. “Mugu.” Nigerian 419 email scammers popularized this expression in Nigeria and beyond. It is understood to mean a chump, that is, a fool who can easily be tricked to part with his or her prized possessions under false pretenses. But this meaning of the word departs from its original Hausa meaning of “sadist.” Now, mugu has other variations such as “maga.”

17. “Haba!” This exclamation of astonishment or disappointment that has crept into Standard Nigerian English is native to the Hausa language. But a British linguist by the name of Roger Blench observed that “Habahaba! was a common expression of joking amazement in the US in the 1940s,” and wonders if there is any relationship between the Nigerian “haba!” and the obsolete American English “habahaba!” in light of the phono-semantic similarities between both expressions. I doubt that there is.

18. “Shikenan” (often rendered as “shikena” in southern Nigeria), the Hausa term for “that is it,” is now almost universally used in Nigerian (Pidgin) English.

19. “Shege.” This means bastard in Hausa, although it can also be used as an intensifier. It is now widely understood and used in the same context in Nigerian Pidgin English.

20. “Zobo” (short for zoborodo), a kind of drink originally limited to Hausa land is now probably the most pan-Nigerian locally produced drink. It is sold in African shops in Europe and North America.
Car Talk / Re: Why Do Nigerians Think The Road In Front Of Their House Belongs To Them? by chakula: 1:47pm On Aug 26, 2022
This issue should be channel to the government because it has a total control of land and its occupants.
Politics / Re: Man With 34 Children, Four Wives Promises Block Votes For Atiku (photos) by chakula: 10:02pm On Aug 25, 2022
crackhouse:
This one want Atiku to recognise him but unfortunately he's in Dubai

The massage can reach him over there. Remember Nairaland is globally.

1 Like

Islam for Muslims / Re: When Did Allah Say The Bible Was Corrupted And How? by chakula: 6:48am On Aug 23, 2022
AntiChristian:
The revelation comes as directed by Allah through the Angel Gabriel from the mouth of our honoured prophet Muhammad salallahu alayhi wasalam. The opening chapter is as Allah wills it to be.

And the Qu'ran wasn't written by one Matthew disciple, Mark Historian, Luke historian, John disciple, Paul infidel turned disciple after Jesus died.

The claim is that the Qu'ran is wholly from Allah!

The Bible is not even from the people who was claimed to have written it.




I am not here to prove that.
The books recognized in Islam are known. Only the Qu'ran is still available both written and in memory worldwide!

The others are lost through the ages! And the original manuscript are no more available. No generation was able to successfully preserve it or commit it fully to memory without distortion, omission, commission, alteration, etc.

In addition to what you wrote the Catholic Bible is differ from other denomitions bibles. Why ?
Foreign Affairs / Re: Huge Explosion Hits Mosque In Kabul, Afghanistan. 60 Killed, Many Injured by chakula: 10:13pm On Aug 17, 2022
May their Souls rest in perfect peace and may the perpetrators be expose amen. angry
Politics / Re: Pictures Of Bola Tinubu And Obasanjo In Abeokuta by chakula: 2:56pm On Aug 17, 2022
All I can see is people are speechless in regard to the pictures.
Politics / Re: Unpopularity Of Labour Party In The North. by chakula: 3:35pm On Aug 16, 2022
Sabonbuharirufa:
God bless you for this post. Do your own. We're doing our own . Let's meet at the success point.

Amen.
Politics / Re: Unpopularity Of Labour Party In The North. by chakula: 3:34pm On Aug 16, 2022
Enyimbafc:
I am in plateau state now,and i have travelled to almost all the LGAs in plateau state and i can tell u labour party is very popular in those local governments. For every 100 people u see in the 15 local government dominated by christains 80 or more are for peter obi.So when u say north,note that NE/NW are not the only zone in north.Obi is also very popular in kaduna,taraba,kano and other states in NORTH were youths use social media and discuss happenings with their illiterate parents.

A wel come development and also commendable.

2 Likes

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (of 96 pages)

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 40
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.