enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Yoruba name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoruba_name

    The Yorùbá believe that previous bearers of a name have an impact on the influence of the name in a child's life. Yorùbá names are traditionally classified into five categories: [2] Orúko Àmútọ̀runwá 'Destiny Names', ("names assumed to be brought from heaven" or derived from a religious background). Examples are: Àìná, Ìgè, and ...

  3. Folake Olowofoyeku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folake_Olowofoyeku

    She is the youngest of 20 children. [1] One of her older brothers is the musician and guitarist Toby Foyeh. Olowofoyeku was named after the first female Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Folake Solanke. [6] Olowofoyeku has spoken about the importance of names in Yoruba culture.

  4. Oríkì - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oríkì

    Oríkì includes both single praise names [1] and long strings of “attributive epithets” that may be chanted in poetic form. [2] According to the Yoruba historian Samuel Johnson, oriki expresses what a child is or what he or she is hoped to become. If one is male, a praise name is usually expressive of something heroic, brave or strong.

  5. Yoruba music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoruba_music

    Yoruba music is the pattern/style of music practiced by the Yoruba people of Nigeria, Togo, and Benin. It is perhaps best known for its extremely advanced drumming tradition and techniques, especially using the gongon [ 1 ] hourglass shape tension drums .

  6. Ogun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogun

    In Yoruba religion, Ogun is a primordial orisha in Yoruba Land. In some traditions, he is said to have cleared a path for the other orisha to enter Earth, using a metal axe and with the assistance of a dog. To commemorate this, one of his praise names, or oriki, is Osin Imole or the "first of the primordial Orisha to come to Earth". He is the ...

  7. Yemọja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yemọja

    In traditional Yoruba culture and spirituality, Yemọja is a mother spirit; patron spirit of women, especially pregnant women; She is the patron deity of the Ogun river (Odò Ògùn) but she has other rivers that are dedicated to her throughout Yorùbáland. In addition, she is also worshipped at almost any stream, creek, springs in addition ...

  8. Asake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asake

    His music is often an amalgamation of traditional yoruba music and percussion spanning heterogeneous contemporary music. Asake's vocal style delivery, primarily in Yoruba merged with English, urban colloquial slang and Nigerian Pidgin , reflects Nigerian hip hop and fújì music influences.

  9. Ọlọrun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ọlọrun

    From the Yoruba language, Olorun's name is a contraction of the words oní (which denotes ownership or rulership) and ọ̀run (which means the Heavens, abode of the spirits). Another name, Olodumare, comes from the phrase "O ní odù mà rè" meaning "the owner of the source of creation that does not become empty," "or the All Sufficient".

  1. Related searches yoruba names child of mine video with lyrics youtube kids music danny go

    yoruba namesyoruba wikipedia
    yoruba musicyoruba folk music
    yoruba music history