Keep in mind, I'm just sharing my own thoughts and what I've seen, not everyone in either country will agree. we can have an open and respectful chat about it, and remember to celebrate the awesome things our cultures share!
Cameroon is soooo beautiful and diverse. Most people have not discovered it yet. Ghana is lovely and it is a nice thing that they can have a good relationship with Nigerians. We already know that Nigeria has so much potential. God bless.
So when are you coming to Ghana.come down to Ghana and experience the different cultures and traditions babe you’ll not regret to visit our motherland Ghana
Point of correction Ghanaians don’t have any relationship is only Nigeria force to see we have relationship Any time Nigeria are doing some thing Ghana Ghana But we Ghanaian doing some thing we don’t mention Nigeria at all Period
@ Ejeoma That was complete gibberish ! I am Ghanaian who is appalled by his uncouth and uneducated views. He is in a bottomless hole if he believes Ghana and Nigeria have no relationships ? He is in denial , but the truth will prevail every time . Long live Ghana/Nigerian friendship 🙌🏾 Thanks for the beautiful video. You are also beautiful with a great personality. I support your channel with a subscription. Stay blessed ❤
I disagree, Nigerians and Ghanaians are similar to each in so many ways than any other country in Africa. Ghanaians love Nigerians and Nigerians love Ghanaians. Let's spread love and not hatred.
In the 70s gnigeriaboil boom saw a lot of Ghanaians go to Nigeria because we were under a dictator Rawlings and no one would trade with us. Life was hard. Nigerians came and recruited nurses doctors other professional,Nigerian schools liked Ghanaian teachers because they were highly educated and they wanted their kids to speak good English. If your school had Ghana teachers you could charge higher. They didn’t stop there there was no sweet dough bread jolloff ripe plantain and beans in Nigerian. Ghanaians settled in agege slum and were cooking these and selling so they were so popular including watches. Ghana had no flour so the business women came in droves and recruited you and older Ghanaian females to cook and run chop bars for them. That is when Nigerians were taught jollof. They told us that Nigerians had never seen jollof they use palm oil to cook some sort of rice something Ghanaians would never use. Then they decided to sack Ghanaian because the economy had been mismanaged. Rawlings sent a boat to collect them but Nigerians beat murdered and robbed many fleeing Ghanaians. BBC CAPTURED MANY FOOTAGES. NOW YOU KNOW
So why are you bringing this back? During the Biafran wars, Busia deed seemingly wicked too. I am a Ghanaian, and I know there are many good things there too. Have you ever tried the fried crab in Lagos? What about their pepper soup? You can't beat that.
@@LIKENESS-ew4zbDo not feel inferior, be bold and tell us you are Nigeria because i am also a Nigerian from Delta Wari. No Ghanaian will write this comment i must be Frankly with you
Cameroon Speaks English Too, and it's right next door to Nigeria, You Cross one border and you're in Cameroon, So you people Prefer Ghana for other reasons even though the Majority of Nigerians don't respect Ghana and Ghanaians, that is why I find it Strange, and Stupid for wanting to be close to People you do not respect
Nigerians respect Ghanaians and Ghanaians respect Nigerians. No one will come and live in your country if they dont respect it. Let's spread love, respect and unity not hatred.
If Nigerians say they are British Colony then should blame the first Nigerian who taught them the English because soup is not stew they should Google and find out.
@@nicholasackatiah1313 It's no big deal! 😉 I'm sure you've encountered words that have evolved in meaning over time. You might find it interesting to know that some words have been added to the dictionary due to their unique usage by Nigerians. We often give words our own distinct meanings. For example, you can look up the word "severally" on Google. Although, traditionally it means "separately or jointly," in Nigerian English, it often means "many times" or "repeatedly." and remember that English itself is a borrowed language, with roots in Latin, French, and many other languages.🫶🏾 Thanks for stopping by and enjoying the video!😊🙌🏼
@@Ejeomah SMH.. You actually think the main dictionaries like Oxford, Cambridge, Collins are going to incorporate the erroneous nigerian definition of ''severally'' which originally means separately, individually into their dictionaries because you deem your own definitions to be distinct and superior to that of original British English? The nigerian definition you sighted on google is just an open interpretation of the word but not a literal definition stated anywhere in a dictionary.
Oxford dictionary definition of soup: ''A (usually savoury) liquid food made by boiling meat, fish, vegetables, etc., with seasoning in stock or water, and frequently served as a first course; a dish or variety of this.'' Keyword - LIQUID!! Are you Nigerians going to challenge Oxford dictionary too and say it's wrong? You people really need to humble yourselves.
@JonGreeny It's no big deal! 😉 I'm sure you've encountered words that have evolved in meaning over time. You might find it interesting to know that some words have been added to the dictionary due to their unique usage by Nigerians. We often give words our own distinct meanings. For example, you can look up the word "severally" on Google. Although, traditionally it means "separately or jointly," in Nigerian English, it often means "many times" or "repeatedly." and remember that English itself is a borrowed language, with roots in Latin, French, and many other languages.🫶🏾 Thanks for stopping by and enjoying the video!😊🙌🏼
@@Ejeomah LOL! You think any proper English dictionary in this world is going to officially acknowledge the nigerian definition of ''severally'' and replace it with the original definition? If google says ''severally'' means many times in the nigerian context then that is just an open interpretation used to juxtapose the true meaning of the word ''severally''. No where in any English dictionary be it Oxford, Cambridge, Collins will you find the word ''severally'' incorporated and defined as many times.
@@Ejeomah LOL.. It's an additional ''sense'' and not the main definition of the word severally. What is the difference between a soup and stew? Or what is the difference between a phone and a computer? Do nigerians also have their distinct definition of these words because you deem yourselves so special and knowledgeable above everyone else? And what's so exciting about the Oxford dictionary adding west-African definitions to their editions? Are you so desperate for the white man's validation or it's just inferiority complex?
I have just read the comments section. Wow. My challenge to you is to visit Cameroon! Please. Contact Elomo Carol - TH-camr. She loves Nigeria and often travels there from Cameroon. If the two of you could make a video together - amazing!
I think first of all there's no nation in the world you wouldn't find Nigerians 😅 and secondly, most make videos about these places they visit either to educate someone interested, inspire, or entertain 😅 so it might look like obsession but it truly isn't 😅
sis there is nothing common between ghana and Nigeria I mean nothing. ghana and cote d ivoire and Togo are the same the Akans are the majority tribe in ghana the same in cote d ivoire ewes in ghana also in Togo. ghana and Nigeria are different even in their way of life.
Yes, even the attitudes and MINDSET of Nigerians are FAR apart from that of Ghanaians: Ghanaians are COMPOSED and ORDERLY, but Nigerians are the OPPOSITE of those traits. I guess the nature of ATTITUDES in both countries have defined the DIFFERENCE in the socio-economic, and even the SECURITY of the two countries as we see today.
@@Loveth-em4pc The truth simply lies in two verifiable observations: How other countries see the demeanor or the general attitude of Ghanaians and Nigerians. The other is, the verifiable state of affairs as prevailable in Nigeria and Ghana. Now where does your accusation of lies come from? You've just proven you are a Nigerian indeed!!!
I think the Ghana Nigeria ish... is mainly because of the ties between both countries in the past, the shared history, culture similarities, language connection and the likes, so it may feel like home I guess
There is no cultural similarities..with nigeria.There is cultural similarities with ivory coast and Togo as the Akan tribe,the Ashantis and panties are in ivory coast and ghana and the ewe tribe are in ghana and Togo. Ghana and Nigeria have nothing in common apart from the English language.
@@kumericadecoded5515 It's no big deal! 😉 I'm sure you've encountered words that have evolved in meaning over time. You might find it interesting to know that some words have been added to the dictionary due to their unique usage by Nigerians. We often give words our own distinct meanings. For example, you can look up the word "severally" on Google. Traditionally it means "separately or jointly," but in Nigerian English, it often means "many times" or "repeatedly." 😃 Also, remember that English itself is a borrowed language, with roots in Latin, French, and many other languages.🙌🏼 Thanks for stopping by and enjoying the video!
Keep in mind, I'm just sharing my own thoughts and what I've seen, not everyone in either country will agree.
we can have an open and respectful chat about it, and remember to celebrate the awesome things our cultures share!
Cameroon is soooo beautiful and diverse. Most people have not discovered it yet. Ghana is lovely and it is a nice thing that they can have a good relationship with Nigerians. We already know that Nigeria has so much potential. God bless.
Hi my queen you made my day nice one a Ghanaian living in Gelsenkirchen Germany 🇩🇪
@@amankwahkweku lovely to e-meet you. 💃💃💃💃Thanks for stopping by 🙏
Adwoa Ejeoma... would love to meet you on your next visit to GHANA😀. You have to climb the popular KWAHU MOUNTAINS. You'll love it.
You are beautiful and i love hearing your experience in Ghana 🇬🇭 ❤. Akwaaba
@@akuaadu-gyamfi5829 thank you 🙌
So when are you coming to Ghana.come down to Ghana and experience the different cultures and traditions babe you’ll not regret to visit our motherland Ghana
@@samuelkofi2683 I would love to experience more, I only stayed in Accra 🤗
Point of correction Ghanaians don’t have any relationship is only Nigeria force to see we have relationship
Any time Nigeria are doing some thing Ghana Ghana
But we Ghanaian doing some thing we don’t mention Nigeria at all
Period
I disagree
@ Ejeoma
That was complete gibberish ! I am Ghanaian who is appalled by his uncouth and uneducated views. He is in a bottomless hole if he believes Ghana and Nigeria have no relationships ?
He is in denial , but the truth will prevail every time . Long live Ghana/Nigerian friendship 🙌🏾
Thanks for the beautiful video. You are also beautiful with a great personality. I support your channel with a subscription.
Stay blessed ❤
@@stanleyglover5534 I applaud your high sense flog reasoning fr. Kudos 👏👏👏👏
I disagree, Nigerians and Ghanaians are similar to each in so many ways than any other country in Africa.
Ghanaians love Nigerians and Nigerians love Ghanaians. Let's spread love and not hatred.
keep the good work up
@@clementsosu1153 thank you 🙌💃
In the 70s gnigeriaboil boom saw a lot of Ghanaians go to Nigeria because we were under a dictator Rawlings and no one would trade with us. Life was hard. Nigerians came and recruited nurses doctors other professional,Nigerian schools liked Ghanaian teachers because they were highly educated and they wanted their kids to speak good English. If your school had Ghana teachers you could charge higher. They didn’t stop there there was no sweet dough bread jolloff ripe plantain and beans in Nigerian. Ghanaians settled in agege slum and were cooking these and selling so they were so popular including watches. Ghana had no flour so the business women came in droves and recruited you and older Ghanaian females to cook and run chop bars for them. That is when Nigerians were taught jollof. They told us that Nigerians had never seen jollof they use palm oil to cook some sort of rice something Ghanaians would never use. Then they decided to sack Ghanaian because the economy had been mismanaged. Rawlings sent a boat to collect them but Nigerians beat murdered and robbed many fleeing Ghanaians. BBC CAPTURED MANY FOOTAGES. NOW YOU KNOW
So why are you bringing this back? During the Biafran wars, Busia deed seemingly wicked too. I am a Ghanaian, and I know there are many good things there too. Have you ever tried the fried crab in Lagos? What about their pepper soup? You can't beat that.
@@LIKENESS-ew4zbDo not feel inferior, be bold and tell us you are Nigeria because i am also a Nigerian from Delta Wari. No Ghanaian will write this comment i must be Frankly with you
It’s called Adaakoa 😊
That brown stuff
All the points you made are correct
They are why there’s that vibe between the 2 countries
@@PoSHEmediaglobal yes, adaakoa!!! I love it 👏🙌 thank you
@@PoSHEmediaglobal Yes the vibe between us, is different!!! 💃🙌 we vibe a lot 💃👏. Thanks for stopping by
@ cheers Adwoa
Cameroon Speaks English Too, and it's right next door to Nigeria, You Cross one border and you're in Cameroon,
So you people Prefer Ghana for other reasons even though the Majority of Nigerians don't respect Ghana and Ghanaians,
that is why I find it Strange, and Stupid for wanting to be close to People you do not respect
@@nanakonadu- same way cameroon people don’t like Nigerians too. Ghanaians own is just heightened
Nigerians respect Ghanaians and Ghanaians respect Nigerians. No one will come and live in your country if they dont respect it. Let's spread love, respect and unity not hatred.
There're also more marriages between Ghanaians/Togolese/Ivorians and speaks similar languages as opposed to Nigerians🇬🇭🇬🇭
@@AlbertMensah-n9n oh really 🙌👏
Is soo shocking Nigeria 250 million population compares themselves 34 million population Ghana and still think they are a head.
@@luckyawadzi3337 oh really, I would like to know more... 👂🏽
Point of correction Ghana is not 34 million population is 32 million population
Delusional Nigerians
Why not, Ghana is far older.
Why not? Ghana is far older.
Well done
@@kobbykuntu-blankson9832 thank you 🙏
It’s funny because I know Nigerians who will call stew soup in Africa but call soup soup when they out here in the states 😂
haha, 🤣😂🤣
If Nigerians say they are British Colony then should blame the first Nigerian who taught them the English because soup is not stew they should Google and find out.
@@nicholasackatiah1313 It's no big deal! 😉 I'm sure you've encountered words that have evolved in meaning over time. You might find it interesting to know that some words have been added to the dictionary due to their unique usage by Nigerians. We often give words our own distinct meanings.
For example, you can look up the word "severally" on Google. Although, traditionally it means "separately or jointly," in Nigerian English, it often means "many times" or "repeatedly."
and remember that English itself is a borrowed language, with roots in Latin, French, and many other languages.🫶🏾
Thanks for stopping by and enjoying the video!😊🙌🏼
@@Ejeomah SMH.. You actually think the main dictionaries like Oxford, Cambridge, Collins are going to incorporate the erroneous nigerian definition of ''severally'' which originally means separately, individually into their dictionaries because you deem your own definitions to be distinct and superior to that of original British English? The nigerian definition you sighted on google is just an open interpretation of the word but not a literal definition stated anywhere in a dictionary.
@JonGreeny she clearly stated ‘Nigerian English’ .I think you should read her comment again
@@Loveth-em4pc There's no nigerian English.. English is solely and strictly a language of the native Brit not nigerians. Stop talking crap..
Nigerians need to learn , there’s a difference between soup and stew
@OfficialSourcesTv We love our soups like this 😄😄😄 we have adopted it to our dictionary 😄
@ 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😅😅😅😅😂😅😅ur funny 😄 it’s strange ooo
I like Ghana jollof. With thier shito
@@Youngblack25 the shitto is top tier 👏🏼🙌🏼
We are same people. I’m yoruna
Oxford dictionary definition of soup: ''A (usually savoury) liquid food made by boiling meat, fish, vegetables, etc., with seasoning in stock or water, and frequently served as a first course; a dish or variety of this.'' Keyword - LIQUID!!
Are you Nigerians going to challenge Oxford dictionary too and say it's wrong? You people really need to humble yourselves.
@JonGreeny It's no big deal! 😉 I'm sure you've encountered words that have evolved in meaning over time. You might find it interesting to know that some words have been added to the dictionary due to their unique usage by Nigerians. We often give words our own distinct meanings.
For example, you can look up the word "severally" on Google. Although, traditionally it means "separately or jointly," in Nigerian English, it often means "many times" or "repeatedly."
and remember that English itself is a borrowed language, with roots in Latin, French, and many other languages.🫶🏾
Thanks for stopping by and enjoying the video!😊🙌🏼
@@Ejeomah LOL! You think any proper English dictionary in this world is going to officially acknowledge the nigerian definition of ''severally'' and replace it with the original definition? If google says ''severally'' means many times in the nigerian context then that is just an open interpretation used to juxtapose the true meaning of the word ''severally''. No where in any English dictionary be it Oxford, Cambridge, Collins will you find the word ''severally'' incorporated and defined as many times.
@ it has been added to the Oxford English dictionary oooo ☺️🤭
@@Ejeomah LOL.. It's an additional ''sense'' and not the main definition of the word severally. What is the difference between a soup and stew? Or what is the difference between a phone and a computer? Do nigerians also have their distinct definition of these words because you deem yourselves so special and knowledgeable above everyone else? And what's so exciting about the Oxford dictionary adding west-African definitions to their editions? Are you so desperate for the white man's validation or it's just inferiority complex?
No, this video is super chaotic, because what??? 😅
thats why I prefer scripting my videos🤣 , in this video I just wanted to have a chill conversation lol
Hut Cameroon officially speaks both french and english
I have just read the comments section. Wow. My challenge to you is to visit Cameroon! Please. Contact Elomo Carol - TH-camr. She loves Nigeria and often travels there from Cameroon. If the two of you could make a video together - amazing!
I think first of all there's no nation in the world you wouldn't find Nigerians 😅 and secondly, most make videos about these places they visit either to educate someone interested, inspire, or entertain 😅 so it might look like obsession but it truly isn't 😅
True🤣
sis there is nothing common between ghana and Nigeria I mean nothing. ghana and cote d ivoire and Togo are the same the Akans are the majority tribe in ghana the same in cote d ivoire ewes in ghana also in Togo. ghana and Nigeria are different even in their way of life.
Yes, even the attitudes and MINDSET of Nigerians are FAR apart from that of Ghanaians: Ghanaians are COMPOSED and ORDERLY, but Nigerians are the OPPOSITE of those traits. I guess the nature of ATTITUDES in both countries have defined the DIFFERENCE in the socio-economic, and even the SECURITY of the two countries as we see today.
@@Okoragyak you know the truth but you prefer to live in lies 🌝
@@Loveth-em4pc The truth simply lies in two verifiable observations: How other countries see the demeanor or the general attitude of Ghanaians and Nigerians. The other is, the verifiable state of affairs as prevailable in Nigeria and Ghana. Now where does your accusation of lies come from? You've just proven you are a Nigerian indeed!!!
I think the Ghana Nigeria ish... is mainly because of the ties between both countries in the past, the shared history, culture similarities, language connection and the likes, so it may feel like home I guess
this 🙌
There is no cultural similarities..with nigeria.There is cultural similarities with ivory coast and Togo as the Akan tribe,the Ashantis and panties are in ivory coast and ghana and the ewe tribe are in ghana and Togo. Ghana and Nigeria have nothing in common apart from the English language.
@ 🙌🏼🙌🏼
If your parents made a mistake by telling you Stews are soups, what about your schools ?
@@kumericadecoded5515 It's no big deal! 😉 I'm sure you've encountered words that have evolved in meaning over time. You might find it interesting to know that some words have been added to the dictionary due to their unique usage by Nigerians. We often give words our own distinct meanings.
For example, you can look up the word "severally" on Google. Traditionally it means "separately or jointly," but in Nigerian English, it often means "many times" or "repeatedly." 😃
Also, remember that English itself is a borrowed language, with roots in Latin, French, and many other languages.🙌🏼
Thanks for stopping by and enjoying the video!
ADJOA 🤣
😅😅😅
I’m Kojo male
@OfficialSourcesTv lovely. What’s the meaning of Kojo
@ Adwoa female, Kojo male “ Monday born
You’re very beautiful
@@damianfung3309 thank you ☺️