Lotí ogba ogbolo

Balondo Civilization

Ákwí Wikipídiya

Abo Balondo-ba-Konja (pure Balondo) chi àbo ku mà kwi àrumeji West-African ki eju enè mà le bi southwest maritime coast of Cameroon.éneke tene abagwanè má kwí Abo ejodùdù kí ejúmá ćhéné kúmá dú ubí Nyanga kpaí ájí modèñ. Stróctúr kí ćhè locálú ćhí matriarchal mányí ábúnè kwí ábó fámilý nwú ónájijí. Íćhí má ćhíTheir language is Londo, ídé efú ábo part of the Congolese-Efik linguistic . rilígoní má ćhí creationistí, ágbojí ébó má yá ćhí Ovase Loba.[1][2]

EU Amoné kúmá dómó mólámá kúmá ćhí Balondo or Balondo-ba-Konja, imíní ógbolo Balondo. Efú íćhí mà onèkà Balondo ćhí Morondo. Má modú ojojí dú wò lámá átodú kúMá dó ólámá dú qwefú ethíníc grúpú. Bafah Balondo má líma ásí ábo non-Balondo kí kwí Oroko rígioní , ábo kíbó lá ćhí ábo Bato .

Ojíle ámoné nejú kákíní Balondo ćhí Bantu, Oroko, Balondoba-Nanga, pkaí Balondoba-Diko. Wilhelm Bleek, éné a German linguist, e usezú témú used the term Bâ-ntu ábékí Bantu, ofèñwu chi amonè abeki aboìle made famoné or humans, to classify and group people with linguistic and cultural similarities in his 1862 publication of A Comparative Grammar of South African Languages.[3][4][5]

  1. Oro, Aja (2015). Balondo Through the Ages 1100 - 2013 (PDF). United States of America: Balondo Cultural Heritage, Inc. and Bookstand Publishing. ISBN 978-1-63498-124-8.
  2. "Full text of "The Septuagint Version Of The Old Testament And Apocrypha With An English Translation And With Various Readings And Critical Notes"". archive.org. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  3. Bleek, W. H. I. (Wilhelm Heinrich Immanuel) (1862). A comparative grammar of South African languages. Library Services University of Pretoria. London : Trübner.
  4. "Fundamentals of Balondo Society av Aja Oro (Häftad)". Bokus.com (in Swedish). Retrieved 2020-04-04.
  5. "History". OCAUSA (in American English). Retrieved 2020-04-04.