Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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 ...
Pages in category "Yoruba given names" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 234 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
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.
Kemi Adetiba (b. 1980), filmmaker, television director, music video director; Kunle Afolayan (b. 1974), actor, film producer and director; Meji Alabi; Oyin Adejobi (1926–2000), dramatist and actor; Tomi Adeyemi (b. 1993), Nigerian-American novelist and creative writing coach; Tunde Kelani (b. 1948), filmmaker, storyteller, photographer ...
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.
Ologunde adopted the name Lágbájá (meaning "Jane Doe" or "John Doe"- A person whose name, identity is intentionally concealed in Yoruba) as he embarked on his career in the early 90s. His name was reflected in his choice of stage attire – a slitted textile and rubber mask adopted so that the artist represented the ‘common man’ in ...
Her name is a contraction of the Yoruba words Iye, a dialect variant of "ìyá" meaning "mother"; ọmọ, meaning "child"; and ẹja, meaning "fish"; roughly translated the term means "mother of fish children". This represents the vastness of her motherhood, her fecundity, and her reign over all living things.
Her music is a mixture of Afropop, highlife, dancehall, pop and R&B, and has been of influence in several countries across Africa. [2] She sings in English, Igbo, Pidgin, Yoruba, French, Swahili and Portuguese. [3] Alade won the Peak Talent Show in 2009 [4] after which she signed to Effyzzie Music Group, and had a hit with her single "Johnny ...