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Aleke Mahe Vinyee? (Ewe)
Aleke Mahe Vinyee? (How Do I Train My Child?) deals with the various aspects of child education and training.
₵25.00Aleke Mahe Vinyee? (Ewe)
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Mia Denyigba (Ewe)
Mia Denyigba (Our Homeland) describes in general the size and physical features of the strip of territory known as Eweland. This stretches along the Gulf of Guinea mainly from the eastern bank of River Volta in Ghana to the eastern boundary of Dahomey. It discusses also some customs and occupations of the people.
₵25.00Mia Denyigba (Ewe)
₵25.00 -
Eʋegbe-‘Daganawo (Ewe)
This book contains an alphabetic list of 1256 Ewe idioms and aphorisms with their meanings also given in Ewe.
The book is designed purposely for those who want to dive into Ewe classics and for students preparing for examinations requiring an advanced knowledge of Ewe.
₵25.00Eʋegbe-‘Daganawo (Ewe)
₵25.00 -
I Tsiɔɔ Nyɛ! (Folktales in Cartoons Book 3, Dangme)
Hɛ nɔ kami nɛ a kɛ ngma womi, I Tsiɔɔ Nyɛ!, nɛ ɔ ji kaa nɔ fɛɛ nɔ nɛ nine maa su eko nɔ nɛ e maa kane ɔ, e ma nya he. Nyaziahi nɛ ngɛ mi ɔ, a kɔ we nɔ ko he, ejaakaa Ga adafi womi nɛ a tsɛɛ ke ‘Maŋsralɔ’, ɔ, e mi nɛ a je kɛ je.
₵35.00 -
I Tsiɔɔ Nyɛ! (Folktales in Cartoons Book 2, Dangme)
Hɛ nɔ kami nɛ a kɛ ngma womi, I Tsiɔɔ Nyɛ!, nɛ ɔ ji kaa nɔ fɛɛ nɔ nɛ nine maa su eko nɔ nɛ e maa kane ɔ, e ma nya he. Nyaziahi nɛ ngɛ mi ɔ, a kɔ we nɔ ko he, ejaakaa Ga adafi womi nɛ a tsɛɛ ke ‘Maŋsralɔ’, ɔ, e mi nɛ a je kɛ je.
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A Li Nɔ Nɛ Ba Puɔ Nɔ (Dangme)
A Li Nɔ Nɛ Ba Puɔ Nɔ is a Dangme expression meaning no one knows his benefactor.
The story is about a couple who went to settle in a neighbouring village to work. But, as if by design, they neither found life easier there.
Not long after they had settled, the wife died of a very serious disease which was a taboo to the fetish of their host clan. How the widower was faced with the problems of pacifying the clan, and caring for their only child, forms the core of the novel.
The eventual reward of his toils and sweat in educating this child did not, however, fail to materialise.
₵35.00 -
Ajesiwɔ (Dangme)
Ajesiwɔ is a story of a girl who is pawned to a wealthy woman trader called Yokpa. But the name Ajesiwɔ literally means ‘They have gone and left us.’
Yokpa is a get-rich-quick woman who offers the spirit of her maid, Ajesiwɔ, to the Goddess of Wealth, known as Akpaso.
Fortunately for Ajesiwɔ the goddess is not able to overpower her spirit and Yokpa becomes unhappy. She, therefore, makes Ajesiwɔ suffer other hardships and humiliations.
Finally, however, Providence works for Ajesiwɔ — she is given a rare opportunity to study medicine overseas. On her return, Yokpa is one of her first patients to be treated.
₵35.00Ajesiwɔ (Dangme)
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Ke Mawu Gbi Mo Ɔ,… (Dangme)
The title of this novel, ‘Ke Mawu Gbi Mo Ɔ’, means ‘You will not die if it is not destined by God’.
The story concerns a boy who left home for work elsewhere in the company of a man he does not know. He passed through many difficulties and hazards of life but in the end he came back home safely- true to the saying that, ‘You will not die if it is not destined by God’.
₵35.00Ke Mawu Gbi Mo Ɔ,… (Dangme)
₵35.00