Gã wiemɔi titiri komɛi ~ Some common expressions in the Gã language of Ghana- Part II.

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athompson

Joined: Mar 2024
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Gã wiemɔi titiri komɛi ~ Some common expressions in the Gã language of Ghana- Part II.


Naa wiemɔi titiri 25 +1 ni esa akɛ ole kɛji ookase Gã wiemɔ. Here are 25 +1 popular expressions every Gã learner or speaker should know.
This tutorial focuses on presentations and everyday inquiries and responses.

Some of the expressions in this tutorial include
” Please”
“Where are you from?
” Where are you going?”
” How are you?”…

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29 Comments

  1. I'm sorry to nitpick on such great material, but I think the correct spelling should be diɛŋtsɛ at 1:09. I'm currently in Techiman and don't have access to my dictionary (Dakubu), but I'm quite certain that's the official spelling. Of course, Gã spelling is evolving, so yours may well be a more modern version.

  2. Thank you so much for these videos!

    I think every language learner has one language that is "their" language, one that they have more passion for. For me, it is without any doubt Gã. About 25 years ago, I gave up on a "promising" career as a programmer and the chance to have a "normal" life to follow my love for this language. I gave up everything and moved to Ghana. It's been a long, hard journey (that isn't over), but I don't regret for a moment. I'm certain at this stage that the Gã language, people, culture and history is going to be a part of me for the rest of my life.

    Over the years, I've collected quite a bit of stuff. I wrote down a large amount of phrases and got friends to translate them and record them. Of course, I've lost much of it over the years (burned hard drives, stolen laptops, etc), but some of it is still there. I have even planned to create a course that would follow the Language Transfer method for learning Gã. I just need to find the time, the money and somebody to do the actual recordings.

    It's great that people are doing things to introduce this beautiful language to the world. I just wish there were more Gã dramas/movies available online and that there was more material to prepare for listening to things like Latenu. Sometimes I understand really well what is being talked about, much of the time I get lost. Ga a little bit resembles a language like Chinese from the point that the basics are quite easy to learn, but the step beyond that feels really difficult. I also wish Gas would contribute sentences on Tatoeba and recordings of individual words on places like Forvo. I rely quite a bit on these resources for other languages and since Gã is my favorite language, I'd love to see it represented.