Nana A̱si̱mawu
Li
Nana A̱si̱mawu
Sot mbyin | a̱nap |
---|---|
A̱byin mbyin | Sokoto Caliphate |
A̱lyoot nang á̱ ku tyia̱ nggu | Nana |
A̱lyoot tyok | princess |
A̱tuk mbyin | 1793 |
A̱keang mbyin | Sokoto |
A̱tuk kwi | 1864 |
A̱keang kwi | Sokoto |
A̱tyia̱ | Uthman Dan Fodio |
Lilyem a̱ lyen lyiat, lyuut ku tyia̱ bwak ma̱ng a̱nhu a̱ni | Shong, Nigerian Pidgin |
Ta̱m | philosopher, poet, writer |
Khwi ku nwuan-ta̱cya̱ | Khwikpaa̱pyia̱ |
Personal pronoun | L484 |
Nana A̱si̱mawu yei (a̱jhyem a̱lyoot: Asmaʾu bint Shehu Usman dan Fodiyoyei, La̱ra̱ba: نانا أسماء بنت عثمان فودي; 1793–1864) ku yet nggwon-a̱nap a̱tyukpaat A̱byintyokkalip Sokoto wu, Usuman ma Fodyo, a̱ si̱ ka ngyet a̱tyulyuut bubwom ma̱ng a̱tyutyiet A̱fa̱taa.[1] A̱ ni̱ yet a̱tyu nang á̱ nwuak shi ba̱t di̱ fam a̱za Naijeriya. Á̱ghyang á̱niet ku kyiak nggu nang kidee tat-a̱pyia̱ ja ma̱ng swat sa̱t a̱nyiuk ka̱ yet doot tafa Khwikpaa̱pyia̱ a̱ni, a̱wot á̱ghyang á̱niet si̱ nwuan nggu nang kyang ku ntung feminizi̱m a̱fwun mi̱ Afi̱rika a̱ni.
Ya̱fang
[jhyuk | jhyuk a̱tyin ka]- ↑ "Nana Asma'u". rlp.hds.harvard.edu (in English). Archived from the original on 2020-03-23. Retrieved 2020-05-26.