Rating 0 out of 5 (0 ratings in Udemy)
What you'll learn- Ngwa alphabets and numerals
- Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs, Adjectives, Adverbs, Prepositions
- Dialectal variations in Ngwa Language
- Time, Market days, and other schedules
- How to make sentences in Ngwa Language
- Random words and their multiple usages
DescriptionHere is where you learn to speak Ngwa Language. Some Ngwa children interact a lot at their respective primary and secondary schools in only English Language. When they get home, …
Rating 0 out of 5 (0 ratings in Udemy)
What you'll learn- Ngwa alphabets and numerals
- Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs, Adjectives, Adverbs, Prepositions
- Dialectal variations in Ngwa Language
- Time, Market days, and other schedules
- How to make sentences in Ngwa Language
- Random words and their multiple usages
DescriptionHere is where you learn to speak Ngwa Language. Some Ngwa children interact a lot at their respective primary and secondary schools in only English Language. When they get home, they cannot speak their parents' Ngwa Language. They stay at home in the evening doing their school work (in English). They go to sleep only to get up early morning for school. This trend starts from their Kindergarten days up to their College graduation. By that time they have lost all opportunities of knowing Ngwa Language. The parents are helpless and wind up speaking only English Language to their children because that is the only way to communicate with the children. The effect is that the parents begin to speak only English Language throughout the house - father, mother, children, guests, etc. Before long, the parents no longer remember all their Ngwa words. As this trend is occurring in virtually all Ngwa homes, the adults (parents, uncles, aunts, etc.) begin to speak only English Language to their friends who are also experiencing the same phenomenon in their respective homes. To make it worse, schools from Kindergarten to university in the homeland make English the first language thereby twisting the arms of parents (in the homeland) into speaking English Language to their children born and being raised in the homeland. This is an excellent opportunity for bring back the erring children and their parents to the cultural basics through Ngwa Language mastery.