Akan, Yorùbá & Mdw Ntr Share the Same Royal Linguistic Root — Here’s the Proof

Akan Yorùbá mdw nTr linguistics

Akan Yorùbá mdw nTr linguistics reveal something profound — our languages carry royal DNA across time and geography. For too long, Afrikan languages have been studied in isolation. However, when we place Akan, Yorùbá, and mdw nTr side by side, a stunning pattern of shared structure emerges. This is not coincidence. This is evidence of a continuous Afrikan civilizational thread.

Ɔbenfo Ọbádélé Bakari Kambon — Pan-Afrikan linguist, scholar, and architect of Abibitumi — presents exactly this evidence in his lecture “Ahene mu Hene.” In it, he examines the superlative construction across all three languages. Furthermore, he demonstrates how one language family uniquely developed a specific grammatical feature. As a result, we gain new tools for comparative linguistic study. Most importantly, we see how these languages confirm, rather than contradict, one another. Ɔbenfo does not simply theorize — he builds the case slide by slide, word by word.

How Akan Yorùbá Mdw Ntr Linguistics Unlock Our Shared Afrikan Identity

This lecture runs 36 minutes and 45 seconds. It includes 30 meticulously prepared slides. In addition, Ɔbenfo walks you through the grammatical architecture that unites these three great language systems. He shows how superlative expressions — the “king of kings” construction — function in each language. Moreover, he highlights what makes one system distinct while proving they all flow from the same deep Afrikan root. This is Abibifahodie through language — reclaiming who we are by recovering how we speak and think.

Whether you are a seasoned scholar, a student of Twi or Yorùbá, or simply an Afrikan person hungry for truth — this lecture was made for you. Abibitumi exists to put this knowledge directly in your hands. Therefore, do not wait for a university to validate what our ancestors already knew. For just $20.00, you gain access to 36 minutes of transformative linguistic scholarship. Watch it once and return to it often. In addition, share it with every Afrikan student, parent, and community builder in your network. Our languages are our liberation. Watch / Get it here: Abibitumi.com.

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