

Lesiba
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As long as African Linguists and African Historians are sitting with the primary data and not rewriting our history, Black history, based on that primary evidence alone, as if that data that is quantitative and qualitative for research aspects of critical aspects in thinking is being avoided, man we ain’t be going nowhere as a people; we gonna… Read more
NonMwenSe-
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
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Science,(noun)
the intellectual and practical activity encompassing the systematic study of the structure and behaviour of the physical and natural world through observation and experiment:
Most dictionaries online say more or less the same thing. I think one can observe only things that exist, language languages that are spoken right here…
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There is no such thing as Africa, African (women, man or child). No language can attest the existence of that derogatory name. If I were to be asked to give it a definition, I would say *Africa (and I put the * there to mean unattested) is a racist construct with imlerialist motives to terminate the exiatence of Kmtyw “Black People”; the result…
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Kgomo go tsoswa e te tekago”
That’s a Sepedi/Setswana/Sesotho proverb. Kgomo is cow. Most often a cow is used as and equated to a human being. This is because cows don’t go alone – there is always a human being along with them. A cow and a human being are inseparable. If a cow has trouble standing up, we only help the one that tries to stand up…
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So “kgomo go tsoswa e tekago” literally
means, “If a cow falls, and if it doesn’t try to get up by itself with (human) assistance, you kill it right there.”
If that’s true, I don’t see nothing wrong with it. If you are helping him/her up and he/she is not budging, it’s not trying to get back on its feet, then you got to do what you got to;…
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Is there a Proto-Kemetic language?
I am asking along the lines of Proto-Indo-European language as a a language reconstructed from Indo-European (and I think I should say) language family?
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88,648 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
It’s called Proto-Négro-Égyptien. You can read more about it in Obenga, Théophile, 1993, Origine commune de l’égyptien ancien, du copte et des langues négro-africaines, Introduction à la linguistique.
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