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The first Igbo word Obi learned was nne — mama. She learned it because her grandmother said it every time she walked into a room. Today's episode teaches what comes after: E nwere m — I have. Three words. A proverb that reframes what having truly means. And a sitting room in Leicester where a grandmother picked up a white trainer and taught a sentence without planning to.
Key Concepts: The verb nwere — to have; Ego (money), Akpụụkwụ (shoes), Uwe (clothes); Informal home language use as the engine of Igbo transmission; Possession in Igbo — things and people both counted.
Scholar: Safeguarding the Igbo Language Through Teaching Igbo Children in Diaspora, Ogirisi: A New Journal of African Studies, Vol. 13 (2017). Finding: informal, daily, home-based Igbo is the most powerful force keeping the language alive in the diaspora.
Proverb: Onye nwere mmadụ ka onye nwere ego. — A person who has people is greater than one who has only money.
Three-Sentence Summary: Researchers have documented that Igbo language survival in the diaspora comes not from classrooms but from kitchens and sitting rooms — wherever a family member who knows the language sits with someone who is just beginning. This episode teaches
E nwere m ego (I have money), E nwere m akpụụkwụ (I have shoes), E nwere m uwe (I have clothes), through a Leicester sitting room, grounded in scholarship on why these ordinary moments carry civilisational weight. The proverb that opens it — Onye nwere mmadụ ka onye nwere ego — uses the exact verb being taught, so the listener hears the lesson before the lesson begins.
This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo.
FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com -
Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube
Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube
Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year.
Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop.
And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.
By Yvonne MbanefoThe first Igbo word Obi learned was nne — mama. She learned it because her grandmother said it every time she walked into a room. Today's episode teaches what comes after: E nwere m — I have. Three words. A proverb that reframes what having truly means. And a sitting room in Leicester where a grandmother picked up a white trainer and taught a sentence without planning to.
Key Concepts: The verb nwere — to have; Ego (money), Akpụụkwụ (shoes), Uwe (clothes); Informal home language use as the engine of Igbo transmission; Possession in Igbo — things and people both counted.
Scholar: Safeguarding the Igbo Language Through Teaching Igbo Children in Diaspora, Ogirisi: A New Journal of African Studies, Vol. 13 (2017). Finding: informal, daily, home-based Igbo is the most powerful force keeping the language alive in the diaspora.
Proverb: Onye nwere mmadụ ka onye nwere ego. — A person who has people is greater than one who has only money.
Three-Sentence Summary: Researchers have documented that Igbo language survival in the diaspora comes not from classrooms but from kitchens and sitting rooms — wherever a family member who knows the language sits with someone who is just beginning. This episode teaches
E nwere m ego (I have money), E nwere m akpụụkwụ (I have shoes), E nwere m uwe (I have clothes), through a Leicester sitting room, grounded in scholarship on why these ordinary moments carry civilisational weight. The proverb that opens it — Onye nwere mmadụ ka onye nwere ego — uses the exact verb being taught, so the listener hears the lesson before the lesson begins.
This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo.
FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com -
Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube
Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube
Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year.
Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop.
And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.