Learning to speak TWI in #Ghana West Africa 🔥

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Learning to speak TWI in #Ghana West Africa 🔥

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31 Comments

  1. Me ma wo akye – 5/10, i think it’s your tone of voice, dont speak in a high tone of voice on “me ma wo”that phrase is neutral, your voice should hardly change tone at all, and akye, “ah” is a neutral tone and “kye” your voice will go up, don’t speak twi like you would English, your voice shouldn’t bounce around in that way.
    E te sen – 9/10 very good, no problems here
    Ye fre me Jamila – 4/10 As I said earlier, your voice is bouncing too much, ye – neutral, fre – up a bit, me – neutral, good if your tone matches “ye”, better if it’s a tad bit lower in tone, and Jamila is an English word, you may say that as you please. Also “me” is pronounced like “mih,” with short “I” sound, like it is in the word igloo.
    Ye fre mo sen – 8/10 still very good, you are just a bit tense that’s all.

    Don’t let all of this make you tense, I’m just suggesting, to improve your sound. Ik in English tone of voice doesn’t really matter, and the bouncing of your voice is added to make it sound less robotic. In twi it doesn’t work that way, the tone of voice matters, and too much movement where it’s not necessary can reduce someone else’s ability to even comprehend what you’ve said. I’m ngl, if it weren’t for the captions, I wouldn’t have even realized for the first few seconds that you were speaking twi 😂😂.