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10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) - Nairaland / General (2) - Nairaland

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Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) / Viral Slangs, Sensations That ‘spiced’ 2021 / 10 Slangs Only A Nigerian Can Understand (2) (3) (4)

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Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Kokoebapluse(m): 1:22pm On Oct 03, 2019
What of oya nah,

4 Likes

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by NORSYK(m): 1:23pm On Oct 03, 2019
What of biko

1 Like

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Kokoebapluse(m): 1:23pm On Oct 03, 2019
Well most slangs Come from yoruba,
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Naijaguy12345(m): 1:23pm On Oct 03, 2019
Mumu
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Isobug: 1:24pm On Oct 03, 2019
Nonsense and Slangs..... Mere local jargons is what Op is generalizing. Mteew
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by TOPCRUISE(m): 1:25pm On Oct 03, 2019
Mugun, didinrin, olosho, were, mumu, ode, yansh;

Only Nigerians know their meaning
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by madenigga(m): 1:25pm On Oct 03, 2019
All those things no be slang.

OSHA prapra no be slangs na just song line.

If u say u dae talk of slangs and u never talk
"Wither you" or "how e dae be"

What's the use
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by tuneryblue(m): 1:25pm On Oct 03, 2019
what about

"you nko"

"ntor"
"oorbi"
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by RexTramadol1: 1:25pm On Oct 03, 2019
happydays1:
oyibo pepper
baba goslow


Shuku shuku pepper
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Platony(m): 1:26pm On Oct 03, 2019
"Ghen Ghen"

"I pray"

"Werey"

1 Like

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by bbamusa: 1:27pm On Oct 03, 2019
10000followers:
These slangs would be hard to explain to a non-Nigerian.

Every country has unique traditions as well as slangs, which are spoken throughout the country. In Nigeria, there are slangs unique to secondary schools, university life, and even regions of the country. Foreigners might have a hard time understanding these slangs and locals might have a hard time explaining them. Here are a few of the slangs unique to Nigeria street life.


1. Ehen!

This exclamation has different interpretations, depending on the context in which it was used. It could mean "I get it", "and so?" "yes", "okay", "continue", "as i was saying", "that reminds me", etc.

*Credit*-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikWJnVxd4Es

.
2. Jara

Jara is a noun derived from the Yoruba language and it means to add extra or give a freebie after something has already been bought or paid for, at the seller's discretion. E.g. "Please add jara".

3. Osha pra pra

This salutation is used when one is praising another, which is loosely translated to mean "you are dope!". It is mostly used in the street to hail/greet a friend or acquaintance who is passing by.

4. Ajebutter

Ajebutter, ajebo, 'bota' or 'botti', simply refers to one who is born with a silver spoon. It can be loosely translated to mean "bourgeoisie". E.g. "That babe is an ajebutter".

5. Lepa/Orobo

Lepa is a noun that refers to a sexy slim woman. E.g. "That lepa babe is hot". Orobo is loosely the opposite of lepa. It refers to a sexy plump/ thick woman. It can also be used as a derogatory remark.


6. Ashewo

This noun is a slang for sex workers. It can also be a derogatory term.

7. Amebo

This word is used to refer to a person who likes to gossip or spread gossip and cannot be trusted. It can also be used to refer to gossip itself. E.g. "You too like amebo" or "That girl is an amebo".

8. Abi/shey/ba

Abi, shey or ba are slang that act sort of like punctuation. They are mostly used for confirmation after a statement, thereby turning it into a question. They are like the English "right?" E.g. "You are coming for my party, abi/shey/ba?"

9. Over-sabi

This is a noun referring to someone who is a busy-body, or mocking someone who over-performs his/her intelligence/knowledge. E.g. "I did not ask you, over-sabi."

10. Kolo

This verb means to go crazy or mad. This can mean literally or metaphorically depending on the context. E.g. "He don kolo".
Credit-

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikWJnVxd4Es

.
kudos for you
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by OlawaleBammie: 1:28pm On Oct 03, 2019
RealLordZeus:
Jara is not Yoruba
Jara is yoruba, it means extra
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by OlawaleBammie: 1:28pm On Oct 03, 2019
phlame:

I didn't know this... undecided
U re missing den
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Grandium: 1:29pm On Oct 03, 2019
Wow

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by sofiscatedmoron: 1:29pm On Oct 03, 2019
lagos slangs and not nigerisn slangs

1 Like

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by OlawaleBammie: 1:29pm On Oct 03, 2019
but majority if dis slang are yoruba-related

1 Like

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by chigoizie7(m): 1:29pm On Oct 03, 2019
Haba nkor?

1 Like 1 Share

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Taciturn1: 1:30pm On Oct 03, 2019
Take time o...
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Nobody: 1:31pm On Oct 03, 2019
Japa
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Xclusiveme: 1:32pm On Oct 03, 2019
Ogbeni come inside
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Ginaz(f): 1:32pm On Oct 03, 2019
What of okobioko?

Warri peeps can relate grin
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Homeboiy: 1:32pm On Oct 03, 2019
If u enter 042

Slangs go change

5 Likes

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by mrvitalis(m): 1:33pm On Oct 03, 2019
sugarsoul:
what of kukuma? what does that one mean? as in when someone goes "you kuku/kukuma know that my own no hard"
Thats for south south people
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by F2st5s: 1:33pm On Oct 03, 2019
10000followers:
These slangs would be hard to explain to a non-Nigerian.

Every country has unique traditions as well as slangs, which are spoken throughout the country. In Nigeria, there are slangs unique to secondary schools, university life, and even regions of the country. Foreigners might have a hard time understanding these slangs and locals might have a hard time explaining them. Here are a few of the slangs unique to Nigeria street life.

Jara is originally Hausa, meaning extra

Kolo is from Fela's song Colonial Mentality. Later adapted in the streets as Kolomental. It later morphed into 'kolo'. You dey kolo means you have mental problem.
Amebo was a busy body character in NTA's 'village headmaster' sitcom of 70s-80s. The name changed to slang depicting a person of such character or a verb for such occurrences.

I add Okada = Commercial motorcycle. The origin was from derogatory remark on Okada Airline owned by Chief Igbinedion. In the twilight of its years, the airline was notable for flight cancellations, delays, waiting for an important personality before taking off etc. Around the same period was the advent of motor cycle transportation in Lagos (around 1994/5). The name okada stuck immediately.





1. Ehen!

This exclamation has different interpretations, depending on the context in which it was used. It could mean "I get it", "and so?" "yes", "okay", "continue", "as i was saying", "that reminds me", etc.

*Credit*-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikWJnVxd4Es

.
2. Jara

Jara is a noun derived from the Yoruba language and it means to add extra or give a freebie after something has already been bought or paid for, at the seller's discretion. E.g. "Please add jara".

3. Osha pra pra

This salutation is used when one is praising another, which is loosely translated to mean "you are dope!". It is mostly used in the street to hail/greet a friend or acquaintance who is passing by.

4. Ajebutter

Ajebutter, ajebo, 'bota' or 'botti', simply refers to one who is born with a silver spoon. It can be loosely translated to mean "bourgeoisie". E.g. "That babe is an ajebutter".

5. Lepa/Orobo

Lepa is a noun that refers to a sexy slim woman. E.g. "That lepa babe is hot". Orobo is loosely the opposite of lepa. It refers to a sexy plump/ thick woman. It can also be used as a derogatory remark.


6. Ashewo

This noun is a slang for sex workers. It can also be a derogatory term.

7. Amebo

This word is used to refer to a person who likes to gossip or spread gossip and cannot be trusted. It can also be used to refer to gossip itself. E.g. "You too like amebo" or "That girl is an amebo".

8. Abi/shey/ba

Abi, shey or ba are slang that act sort of like punctuation. They are mostly used for confirmation after a statement, thereby turning it into a question. They are like the English "right?" E.g. "You are coming for my party, abi/shey/ba?"

9. Over-sabi

This is a noun referring to someone who is a busy-body, or mocking someone who over-performs his/her intelligence/knowledge. E.g. "I did not ask you, over-sabi."

10. Kolo

This verb means to go crazy or mad. This can mean literally or metaphorically depending on the context. E.g. "He don kolo".
Credit-

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikWJnVxd4Es

.
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by skukimania(f): 1:33pm On Oct 03, 2019
'Jara' na Hausa word oh. I think Yoruba kind of borrowed it.
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by RPirez: 1:35pm On Oct 03, 2019
Everything na Yoruba
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by F2st5s: 1:35pm On Oct 03, 2019
10000followers:
These slangs would be hard to explain to a non-Nigerian.

Every country has unique traditions as well as slangs, which are spoken throughout the country. In Nigeria, there are slangs unique to secondary schools, university life, and even regions of the country. Foreigners might have a hard time understanding these slangs and locals might have a hard time explaining them. Here are a few of the slangs unique to Nigeria street life.


1. Ehen!

This exclamation has different interpretations, depending on the context in which it was used. It could mean "I get it", "and so?" "yes", "okay", "continue", "as i was saying", "that reminds me", etc.

*Credit*-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikWJnVxd4Es

.
2. Jara

Jara is a noun derived from the Yoruba language and it means to add extra or give a freebie after something has already been bought or paid for, at the seller's discretion. E.g. "Please add jara".

3. Osha pra pra

This salutation is used when one is praising another, which is loosely translated to mean "you are dope!". It is mostly used in the street to hail/greet a friend or acquaintance who is passing by.

4. Ajebutter

Ajebutter, ajebo, 'bota' or 'botti', simply refers to one who is born with a silver spoon. It can be loosely translated to mean "bourgeoisie". E.g. "That babe is an ajebutter".

5. Lepa/Orobo

Lepa is a noun that refers to a sexy slim woman. E.g. "That lepa babe is hot". Orobo is loosely the opposite of lepa. It refers to a sexy plump/ thick woman. It can also be used as a derogatory remark.


6. Ashewo

This noun is a slang for sex workers. It can also be a derogatory term.

7. Amebo

This word is used to refer to a person who likes to gossip or spread gossip and cannot be trusted. It can also be used to refer to gossip itself. E.g. "You too like amebo" or "That girl is an amebo".

8. Abi/shey/ba

Abi, shey or ba are slang that act sort of like punctuation. They are mostly used for confirmation after a statement, thereby turning it into a question. They are like the English "right?" E.g. "You are coming for my party, abi/shey/ba?"

9. Over-sabi

This is a noun referring to someone who is a busy-body, or mocking someone who over-performs his/her intelligence/knowledge. E.g. "I did not ask you, over-sabi."

10. Kolo

This verb means to go crazy or mad. This can mean literally or metaphorically depending on the context. E.g. "He don kolo".
Credit-

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikWJnVxd4Es

.

Jara is originally Hausa, meaning extra

Kolo is from Fela's song Colonial Mentality. Later adapted in the streets as Kolomental. It later morphed into 'kolo'. You dey kolo means you have mental problem.
Amebo was a busy body character in NTA's 'village headmaster' sitcom of 70s-80s. The name changed to slang depicting a person of such character or a verb for such occurrences.

I add Okada = Commercial motorcycle. The origin was from derogatory remark on Okada Airline owned by Chief Igbinedion. In the twilight of its years, the airline was notable for flight cancellations, delays, waiting for an important personality before taking off etc. Around the same period was the advent of motor cycle transportation in Lagos (around 1994/5). The name okada stuck immediately.

10 Likes

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by tot(f): 1:36pm On Oct 03, 2019
So funny. Nigerians are hilarious.

1 Like

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by RSVP: 1:37pm On Oct 03, 2019
Oya nah

Omo

No wahala
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by SEGLIZ: 1:37pm On Oct 03, 2019
RealLordZeus:
Jara is not Yoruba

if járá is not Yoruba, what then it?
Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by Successlane: 1:38pm On Oct 03, 2019
OlawaleBammie:


Jara is yoruba, it means extra

Really?

Thought is Hausa - meaning extra.

2 Likes

Re: 10 Slangs Only Nigerians Can Understand (hilarious) by olu77(m): 1:40pm On Oct 03, 2019
RealLordZeus:
Jara is not Yoruba

Jara is hausa

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