On 2016-03-10 08:20:08 yankee23a said:
@Mujahid - if i had such a slicked up nja jammie such as yours and so much of gold id also want to be called Boss...Boss ;-)
On 2016-03-10 18:26:41 yankee23a said:
Ok and my interpretation of that is just this....wtf !!!...??? ....thats kak explanation....poor effort...
On 2016-03-10 17:35:34 Sassy Cassie said:
Lol guys sorry my spelling may have led to offending a few patrons on the site...
What I meant was as follows:
Abantu (or 'Bantu' as it was used by colonists) is the Zulu word for people. It is the plural of the word 'umuntu', meaning 'person'
This original meaning changed through the history of South Africa. It is a term used in two ways in archaeology, history and anthropology:
(1) it named a major linguistic group in Africa, and more locally, to identify the sizeable group of Nguni languages spoken by many Africans in sub-Saharan Africa, and
(2) it identifies those Bantu-speakers who spoke that group of closely related languages which linguists divide into four categories: Nguni, Sotho-Tswana, Venda and Tsonga-speakers.
It is important to note that the Bantu-speaking peoples are not an homogenous group. They comprise more than a 100 million Negroid people who live in southern and central Africa, ranging from Nigeria and Uganda to South Africa, and who speak about 700 languages, including many dialects.
And now I take a bow...
Luv Cass
Xxxx