To many Nigerians, being light in complexion is equivalent to beauty. This is the product of westernization and decades of brainwashing and obsession with western ideals. They forget that true beauty is perfect symmetry of the face... The face of this woman is not symmetrical.
Biafra....hmmm I wish it can be actualize...but that's a mere wish. Remains a dream... That may never happen. This is true especially if this biafra thing is not in the mind of God. God knows why depite the thousands of innocent souls that perish in the civil war didn't change the mind of God. And I don't think it will change now either... Spiritual domain control the physical. Things don't just happen...
Biafra....hmmm I wish it can be actualize...but that's a mere wish. Remains a dream... That may never happen. This is true especially if this biafra thing is not in the mind of God. God knows why depite the thousands of innocent souls that perish in the civil war didn't change the mind of God. And I don't think it will change now either... Spiritual domain control the physical. Things don't just happen...
Biafra....hmmm I wish it can be actualize...but that's a mere wish. Remains a dream... That may never happen. This is true especially if this biafra thing is not in the mind of God. God knows why depite the thousands of innocent soul that perish in the civil war didn't change the mind of God. And I don't think it will change now either... Spiritual domain control the physical. Things don't just happen...
ReubenE: It is clear you're not getting the point here. I'm not trying to ridicule your argument.
All the example you gave of a Man being called a woman, wolf-termite etc still doesn't invalidate what I opined. What if it is discovered and agreed tomorrow that Man was suppose to be called a Woman, and a Wolf is suppose to be called a termite.
What if scientists tomorrow discover that the West is actually the East, and the South is actually the North, would you still make a case for what you're saying now??
Like I said before, people give names to things when the NEED arises, and it must not necessarily mean something in English because English is not the only phenomenon in the world. Nigeria can equally name things when the need arises
FYI, The words WEST and EAST were not originally English, their roots is in German and Dutch.
Maybe you can go and fight the English people too for referring to a certain part of the world MIDDLE EARTH some hundreds of years ago.
Middle-East, Middle-Earth, ASEAN (Association of South-Eastern Asian Nations) etc. Maybe new cardinal points needs to be created to accommodate all the above names.
Nope, new cardinal points need not to be created as you suggest . instead, you need to reoriented you mindset and stop creating confusion in the mist of confusions....
phyllosilicate: Your are correct. Same way there is middle east and there is no middle east in cardinal points.
You're just confusing yourself, man. And the fact that you are a fellow geologists makes me wonder what school you attend.... Since you can't identify an adjective for what it is. If "middle" is an adjective to "East", then check the map you will see it in the middle. Hence, the term middle east. How then, as a geology student that you are, can you justify the term "North central" ? Middle east and North central are not the same. The former can be justify both semantically and english wise. But the the later is illogical, grammatically and semantically wrong.
ReubenE: @ OP, can your moniker be found in English?
People give names to things when the need arises. Whether it is not in tandem with English requirements or fails to reflect the cardinal points doesn't invalidate its existence.
What if Nigeria is not a English speaking country, and they named it IJEBU CENTRAL, will you still argue same....
The people living there no longer want to be a part of the others, that's what we should argue and not whether it is English or not
If that be the case, why not start referring to the south as north, west as east, woman as man, dog as wolf, ant as termite and what have you...? This is the problem with Nigeria... when an irregularity is identified and pointed out, we create a defense mechanism around it instead of acknowledging it. No wonder we are so backward in many ways...we don't see things as they are or base on logic and common sense. We love to be unconventional in every way of our reasoning...
BlacSmit: There's either southwest or southeast no south south.
And for your question, YES. Middle belt in Central north
You are dead wrong! The word Middle belt is not semantically and geographically equivalent to Central north. Man, go do some revision in your geography. Understand how the cardinal points are rightly placed in a region. And also review your understanding of "adjectives" in English... then reason logically and objectively. After you have done all these, then post something reasonably on Nairaland.
You are dead wrong! The word Middle belt is not semantically and geographically equivalent to Central north. Man, go do some revision in your geography. Understand how the cardinal points are rightly placed in a region. And also review your understanding of "adjectives" in English... then reason logically and objectively. After you have done all these, then post something reasonably on Nairaland...
BlacSmit: There is also nothing like South-South in Geography or English.
But there's Central north in geography
What are you trying to drive home now? Are you trying to say "Central North" is semantically equivalent to Middle-belt? If that is what you mean, then you have to go and upgrade your logic and understanding of English words. The word "Central North" is simply the central part of that North you have correctly identify based on cardinal point. As for "South south", I agree with that...
The word middle belt is the appropriate term used in every country of the world to describe the central region of a country. Geographically and English wise, there is nothing like "Northcentral". This word is only use in Nigeria. To prove my point, just Google search the word "Northcentral" you will see that it is only associated with Nigeria. There is nothing like north central; just as there is nothing like south central... You will never find it in any English dictionary. This word was coined and imposed on the middle belt to give the North political advantage over the south in terms of population and psychological edge in elections. And guess what? It is working for them.....
What do you understand by cardinal point, man? The word middle belt is the appropriate term used in every country of the world to describe the central region of a country. Geographically and English wise, there is nothing like "Northcentral". This word is only use in Nigeria. To prove my point, just Google search the word "Northcentral" you see that it is only associated with Nigeria. There is nothing like north central; just as there is nothing like south central... You will never find it in any English dictionary. This word was coined and imposed on the middle belt to give the North political advantage over the south in terms of population and psychological edge in elections. And guess what? It is working for them.....
Jabioro: This one that looks like ape? I am a very decent man..no car thrilled me to rape..I am a father with much responsibility, thinking of rape any woman is last can come to my mind ...my children are stars well known home and abroad..I am not your mate.. follow me to reasonable comments..Ok
And who are you to call God's creation an ape? Learn to weigh your words before spewing them out. If you don't care about insulting God's ingenuity, at least imagine the woman in question reading your post on naira land calling her ape...
sanmtiago: most especially if she has a low self esteem
What's special about this whitey thing self.... They are just human beings like every other colour. If you peel their skin, they will bleed red just like you. Let's stop idolizing this people for God sake.... They are not anything different from you...
pinkPUSSY: Never you in your entire life polute my mentions with rubbish in the name of useless advise.
Hypocrite! You didn't preach to your brothers who opened a thread that got up to 300 pages boasting that they are the most educated and best tribe in Nigeria only to be exposed and counterd with facts and figures which made them to dessert the thread they created with the intention of beating their flat ewedu chests I am sure your type would have been dancing unclad on this thread if the news is a drug related topic.
Nonsense!
Sorry buddy, You assumed wrongly. I am not Yoruba nor Hausa.... What I just said is the simple truth...take or leave it.
Jetrue3oo: it was through corruptible manner the federal capital territory was moved out of Calabar, so if Nigeria want to rest her factory settings let them move the capital back to Calabar or else they will continue to try but they will never succeed.
pinkPUSSY: Nigerian writer, Chigozie Obioma’s second novel “An Orchestra of Minorities,” was announced on Wednesday as one of the books in the running for the Booker Prize, Britain’s most prestigious literary award.
Obioma, whose novel “The Fishermen” was a Finalist on the Booker Prize in 2015, faces strong competition for the award. Other nominated books include Salman Rushdie’s forthcoming “Quichotte,” about a traveling salesman who drives across the United States, and “10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World” by Elif Shafak, about a prostitute in Istanbul.
Of Igbo descent, Obioma was born into a family of 12 children — seven brothers and four sisters – in Akure, in the southwestern part of Nigeria, where he grew up speaking Yoruba, Igbo, and English. As a child, he was fascinated by Greek myths and the British masters, including Shakespeare, John Milton, and John Bunyan. Among African writers, he developed a strong affinity for Wole Soyinka's The Trials of Brother Jero; Cyprian Ekwensi's An African Night's Entertainment; Camara Laye's The African Child; and D. O. Fagunwa's Ògbójú ?d? nínú Igbó Irúnmal??, which he read in its original Yoruba version. Obioma cites his seminal influences as The Palm-Wine Drinkard by Amos Tutuola, for its breadth of imagination; Tess of the d'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy, for its enduring grace and heart; The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy and Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov, both for the power of their prose; and Arrow of God by Chinua Achebe, for its firmness in Igbo culture and philosophy.
Obioma's first novel, The Fishermen, has been translated into 27 languages and has received several awards. In addition to being listed as a 2015 New York Times Sunday Book Review Notable Book[8] and a New York Times Sunday Book Review Editor's Choice selection.
Nigerian writer, Chigozie Obioma, longlisted for the 2019 Booker Prize
The list of nominees is dominated by novels inspired by political crises, such as John Lanchester’s “The Wall,” set on an island surrounded by a concrete barrier to keep rising seas and immigrants out. The Mexican author Valeria Luiselli’s “Lost Children Archive,” about child migrants, has also made the cut. “The brilliance of the writing stirs rage and pity,” wrote Gaiutra Bahadur, in a review of the book for The New York Times.
The nominated books “imagine our world, familiar from news cycle disaster and grievance, with wild humor, deep insight and a keen humanity,” said Peter Florence, the chair of the judges, in a statement. “These writers offer joy and hope.”
Other books on the list are less political, such as Oyinkan Braithwaite’s comic thriller, “My Sister, The Serial Killer,” about two siblings in Lagos, one of whom has a habit of murdering her boyfriends. It is “a bombshell of a book — sharp, explosive, hilarious,” wrote Fiammetta Rocco in The New York Times. “Only after you turn the last page do you realize that, as with many brilliant comic writers before her, laughter for Braithwaite is as good for covering up pain as bleach is for masking the smell of blood.”
From its inception in 1969 until 2014, the Booker prize was limited to books by writers from Britain, Ireland and Commonwealth countries (plus South Africa and, later, Zimbabwe), but that changed in 2014, when it was opened to works by anyone writing in English. That led to fears it would be dominated by Americans.
In 2016, Paul Beatty’s “The Sellout” took the prize, and, the following year, “Lincoln in the Bardo,” by George Saunders, won. Both writers are American. After that, criticism of the rule change grew, and non-American authors complained they were being crowded out. In 2018, a literary society that counts Margaret Atwood, Ian McEwan and Zadie Smith among its members demanded the rule be reversed.
The closest this year’s longlist comes to a book by an American writer is “Ducks, Newburyport,” by Lucy Ellmann, who was born in Illinois, but moved to Britain when she was 13 and now lives in Edinburgh.
The nominees will be narrowed down to a shortlist of six that will be revealed on Sept. 3, and the winner, who receives around $62,000, will be announced at a ceremony in London on Oct. 14.
The nominees in full are:
• Margaret Atwood, “The Testaments” • Kevin Barry, “Night Boat to Tangier” • Oyinkan Braithwaite, “My Sister, The Serial Killer” • Lucy Ellmann, “Ducks, Newburyport” • Bernardine Evaristo, “Girl, Woman, Other” • John Lanchester, “The Wall” • Deborah Levy, “The Man Who Saw Everything” • Valeria Luiselli, “Lost Children Archive” • Chigozie Obioma, “An Orchestra of Minorities” • Max Porter, “Lanny” • Salman Rushdie, “Quichotte” • Elif Shafak, “10 Minutes 38 Seconds in This Strange World” • Jeanette Winterson, “Frankissstein.”
All i keep seeing from one particular tribe in Nigeria is ethnocentrism, exaggerations and self-glorification. This I have observed over and over again. And now, I am force to conclude that this is their nature--ethnic glorification. I perceive people who always try to exalt themselves above others as shallow and weak inside. It is just a coping mechanisms use to affirm themselves of their doubts. Come to think of it, if I know that know that I am what I am, do I need to try to get people convince that I am whatever I am by exalting myself in subtle ways...? Just like you will never see bill gate come out and beat his chest saying, " I am the richest man on earth'. He doesn't need to say it. Neither will you hear Jeff bezzos say that. Now, what am I trying to drive home here ? what I am to say is that there is no scientific research that shows that certain ethnic group have genius blood running through their veins while others aren't. Intellectual fit attain by few individual within an ethnic group cannot be generalized to be a distinctive trait within that ethnic group. Any man from any village in Nigeria can achieve anything , provided he is persistent, focus and determined. It is therefore childish to use the achievement of few individual within your ethnic group to gratify your pride-thirsty heart. In sumarry, it is not wise for a man to praise himself". I hope I have nullify the subtle suggestion the OP is trying to make...?
Nigeria, gradually turning into middle east regions like Iran and Syria. The painful thing is that they are turning my state, abuja, to a battlefield. The once peaceful fct is now turning into bloody Islamic battlefield. A religion that has prove itself over time not to have value for human life... It's disgusting to share a country with humans that don't value even their own life for religions reasons. If a man don't value his own life, how can he value another?
tstx: Do you mean the same Supreme being that Nigerian Christians prayed to during 2019 elections.?
If you are looking for a way to justify your inability to believe that Jesus is the only way, I am sorry to dissappoint you because your are blind even though you claim to see. And I will not reply you again because it is pointless and fruitless...... Byeeeeeeee
tstx: One thing Nigerians need to know... If our federal government want to force RUGA on us, they will. And nothing, absolutely nothing will happen. That's the plane truth....
Man, I guess you are ignorant of the supreme being that have the final say. Have you forgotten abacha?
“This issue of Ruga settlement can be likened to the situation where you will carry pigs from the south, to a complete Muslim community and you say you want to create a space for people who have engaged in piggery to do their farms in a Muslim community"
dominique: There is a thread for miners that was quite active a while back. It's in the science and technology section, I'll help you look it up when I'm chanced. Don't listen to anybody jumping into your inbox to propose one business or the other. They're mostly frauds
Cc Mkmyers45
Pls post the link of the thread....I've been waiting.
Afonjas: That means you're ignorant of Africa and the world.
Many Africans have their own writing characters, most most of them did not survive the colonial rules, eg Ethiopia is officially using their own till today,
Nsibidi are sign characters, it need to be developed before it can be used.
If it needs to be developed as you said, then it is primitive. If it is not been use today, then what is your point or how does it counter what i said initially.
Afonjas: My point is that Latin characters are foreign to English and Igbo people, they adopted it just like we did. Know that the Latin character is foreign to English, people who ruled over them brought it to them. Igbo alphabets are totally different from English alphabets.
Oga i know know which one be igbo characters again. If igbo get characters, then why wuna no dey usam. I am just wondering what point you are trying to drive... Note, there is no country or tribe in Africa that has its own character....watin you dey try claim... Guy..
Afonjas: My point is that Latin characters are foreign to English and Igbo people, they adopted it just like we did. Know that the Latin character is foreign to English, people who ruled over them brought it to them. Igbo alphabets are totally different from English alphabets.
Afonjas: Igbo is not written with English letters, though I support Igbo people creating their own characters like the Koreans did or modify Nsibidi characters, Modern day Igbo is written with Latin. Latin characters are not English. I don't know if the English people had their own characters, they are using the Latin characters just like other European countries and beyond. Even the English language you here today is made up of many languages
Whats the point? Wether you call it latin characters or english alphabet. The truth is that they are using foreign characters...
madmohamed: then don't take it too far, is like if someone or if I don't know English I'm stupid
I didn't say you are stupid. All i am saying is that we should give room for improvement any time we are corected. I myself, i'm not perfect in english. I am still learning...