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abakwa: Difference between revisions

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<abbr title="masculine gender">''m''</abbr>[[Category:Masculine gender Hausa nouns]]/<abbr title="feminine gender">''f''</abbr>[[Category:Feminine gender Hausa nouns]]
<abbr title="masculine gender">''m''</abbr>
[[Category:Masculine gender Hausa nouns]]
/<abbr title="feminine gender">''f''</abbr>
[[Category:Feminine gender Hausa nouns]]
# ɗan [[koyo]] <> a [[learner]], [[pupil]].
# ɗan [[koyo]] <> a [[learner]], [[pupil]].
# [[bagidaje]].
# [[bagidaje]].
# Beginning in the mid-nineteenth century, Hausa migrants traveled to the Cameroon Grassfields where they established multiple settlements known as '''abakwa''', a term referring to descendants of mixed marriages between Hausa men and local, mainly non-Muslim women. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/26362135]

Latest revision as of 04:32, 11 May 2022

m /f

  1. ɗan koyo <> a learner, pupil.
  2. bagidaje.
  3. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth century, Hausa migrants traveled to the Cameroon Grassfields where they established multiple settlements known as abakwa, a term referring to descendants of mixed marriages between Hausa men and local, mainly non-Muslim women. [1]