Igbo Daily Drops

Learn Igbo: The Past Tense — The Soil That Outranks the Archive | Igbo Daily Drops (S2 E98) Week 20

9 min · I går
episode Learn Igbo: The Past Tense — The Soil That Outranks the Archive | Igbo Daily Drops (S2 E98) Week 20 cover

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A professor in Lagos tells her the evidence is "not conclusive." The mud on her boots disagrees. In this episode of Igbo Daily Drops, you'll learn 3 past-tense Igbo sentences — the language for standing on what you know when an institution tells you to doubt it. When an agricultural economist carbon-dates rice cultivation in Nkpologwu to centuries before the colonial record admits, she is not making a discovery — she is restoring a calendar. This is intangible cultural heritage as living science: the documentation of an endangered language and worldview, and an act of African heritage renaissance that returns the authority over the past to the people who never lost it. Education for cultural understanding begins where the archive ends. Research in this episode draws on Chima J. Korieh, Central Michigan University, 2001 — whose study of colonial agricultural policy shows that British administrators were trained not to record women farmers, rendering them invisible in the official record by design rather than by accident. 📖 Today's proverb: Ihe a na-achọ n'uko gbadoro ụkwụ n'ala — What is searched for in the ceiling has its feet on the ground. 🗣️ Sentences practised today: 1. Nne nne m kọrọ m ya — My maternal grandmother told me this. 2. Ọ bụ eziokwu, ọ bụghị akụkọ ifo — It is truth, not a folktale. 3. Ala na-edebe ihe niile — The earth keeps everything. 📥 Free Speaking Workbook: learnigbonow.com 🏛️ By every measure UNESCO uses to assess a language's vitality — intergenerational transmission, community attitudes, government support — Igbo is vulnerable. This podcast documents Igbo intangible cultural heritage — oral traditions, social practices, rituals, and knowledge systems — while teaching conversational Igbo to diaspora learners worldwide. Every episode is part of the Igbo Daily Drops Living Archive. Hosted by Yvonne Chioma Mbanefo — Heritage Futurist and Daughter of the soil. ▶️ Watch the visual version on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgbo/podcasts 🎧 Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/iddspot 🎧 Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/iddapple 🌐 learnigbonow.com Every sentence you learn is a drop. Every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo. FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com [https://www.learnigbonow.com/] - Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/learnigbo] Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgboforKids]  Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year.  Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop.  And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.

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episode Learn Igbo: What Did You Do Today? — The Day Outlasts the Bronze | Igbo Daily Drops (S2 E99) Week 20 cover

Learn Igbo: What Did You Do Today? — The Day Outlasts the Bronze | Igbo Daily Drops (S2 E99) Week 20

A grandmother in a 9th-century compound decides not to give the easy answer. In this episode of Igbo Daily Drops, you'll learn 3 everyday Igbo phrases for talking about your day — and discover why, in Igbo thought, telling it is not small talk but an act of keeping. Beside the bronze-casters of Igbo-Ukwu — whose leopard vessels would survive a thousand years in the earth — an elder named Mgbafor teaches her granddaughter that the metal keeps the body, but only the spoken day keeps the soul. This is intangible cultural heritage in its living form: an endangered language carried forward in the mouth, education for cultural understanding, and a small act in the African heritage renaissance — the daily reckoning that refuses to forget. Research in this episode draws on Emmanuel Obiechina, Ahiajoku Lecture, 1994 — who named the Igbo a "story-centred" people who preserve memory and continuity through narrative rather than writing. 📖 Today's proverb: Nkọlịka — Recalling is the greatest (the story is supreme). 🗣️ Sentences practised today: 1. Gịnị ka ị mere taa? — What did you do today? 2. A gara m ọrụ taa. — I went to work today. 3. A hụrụ m gị taa. — I saw you today. 📥 Free Speaking Workbook: learnigbonow.com 🏛️ By every measure UNESCO uses to assess a language's vitality — intergenerational transmission, community attitudes, government support — Igbo is vulnerable. This podcast documents Igbo intangible cultural heritage — oral traditions, social practices, rituals, and knowledge systems — while teaching conversational Igbo to diaspora learners worldwide. Every episode is part of the Igbo Daily Drops Living Archive. Hosted by Yvonne Chioma Mbanefo — Heritage Futurist and Daughter of the soil. ▶️ Watch the visual version on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgbo/podcasts 🎧 Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/iddspot 🎧 Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/iddapple 🌐 learnigbonow.com Every sentence you learn is a drop. Every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo. FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com [https://www.learnigbonow.com/] - Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/learnigbo] Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgboforKids]  Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year.  Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop.  And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.

2. juli 20268 min
episode Learn Igbo: The Past Tense — The Soil That Outranks the Archive | Igbo Daily Drops (S2 E98) Week 20 cover

Learn Igbo: The Past Tense — The Soil That Outranks the Archive | Igbo Daily Drops (S2 E98) Week 20

A professor in Lagos tells her the evidence is "not conclusive." The mud on her boots disagrees. In this episode of Igbo Daily Drops, you'll learn 3 past-tense Igbo sentences — the language for standing on what you know when an institution tells you to doubt it. When an agricultural economist carbon-dates rice cultivation in Nkpologwu to centuries before the colonial record admits, she is not making a discovery — she is restoring a calendar. This is intangible cultural heritage as living science: the documentation of an endangered language and worldview, and an act of African heritage renaissance that returns the authority over the past to the people who never lost it. Education for cultural understanding begins where the archive ends. Research in this episode draws on Chima J. Korieh, Central Michigan University, 2001 — whose study of colonial agricultural policy shows that British administrators were trained not to record women farmers, rendering them invisible in the official record by design rather than by accident. 📖 Today's proverb: Ihe a na-achọ n'uko gbadoro ụkwụ n'ala — What is searched for in the ceiling has its feet on the ground. 🗣️ Sentences practised today: 1. Nne nne m kọrọ m ya — My maternal grandmother told me this. 2. Ọ bụ eziokwu, ọ bụghị akụkọ ifo — It is truth, not a folktale. 3. Ala na-edebe ihe niile — The earth keeps everything. 📥 Free Speaking Workbook: learnigbonow.com 🏛️ By every measure UNESCO uses to assess a language's vitality — intergenerational transmission, community attitudes, government support — Igbo is vulnerable. This podcast documents Igbo intangible cultural heritage — oral traditions, social practices, rituals, and knowledge systems — while teaching conversational Igbo to diaspora learners worldwide. Every episode is part of the Igbo Daily Drops Living Archive. Hosted by Yvonne Chioma Mbanefo — Heritage Futurist and Daughter of the soil. ▶️ Watch the visual version on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgbo/podcasts 🎧 Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/iddspot 🎧 Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/iddapple 🌐 learnigbonow.com Every sentence you learn is a drop. Every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo. FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com [https://www.learnigbonow.com/] - Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/learnigbo] Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgboforKids]  Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year.  Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop.  And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.

I går9 min
episode Learn Igbo: The Oracle That Forgot Nothing: Igbo Words for Morning & Evening (Times of Day) (S2 E97) Week 20 cover

Learn Igbo: The Oracle That Forgot Nothing: Igbo Words for Morning & Evening (Times of Day) (S2 E97) Week 20

What does an 18th-century oracle have to do with learning how to say morning and evening in Igbo? Everything. In Arochukwu, Abia State, stood the Ibin Ukpabi oracle — known to the British as the Long Juju. It heard murder cases, settled family disputes, delivered final pronouncements. And the first thing it required of every person who came before it was not their name, not their grievance — but the exact time they arrived. Not "about seven." Exactly. Today, Nwobodo — son of an oracle attendant — teaches a young doctoral researcher what her university never told her: precision is not a Western legal invention. It is the oldest requirement of justice in Igboland. Three sentences. Three times of day. One civilisation's understanding that vague testimony is not testimony at all. You will learn: * Anyị hụrụ ha n'anyasị — We saw them in the evening / night * E hiri m ura n'anyasị — I slept in the evening / night  * Ị hụrụ nne gị n'ụtụtụ? — Did you see your mother in the morning? **** Anyasị and Abali mean the same thing - Night / Late evening  Grab your free Speaking Workbook: LearnIgboNow.com 🏛️ By every measure UNESCO uses to assess a language's vitality — intergenerational transmission, community attitudes, government support —  Igbo is vulnerable. This podcast documents Igbo intangible cultural  heritage — oral traditions, social practices, rituals, and knowledge  systems — while teaching conversational Igbo to diaspora learners  worldwide. Every episode is part of the Igbo Daily Drops Living Archive. Hosted by Yvonne Chioma Mbanefo — Heritage Futurist and Daughter of the Soil. ▶️ Watch the visual version on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgbo/podcasts 🎧 Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/iddspot 🎧 Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/iddapple 🌐 learnigbonow.com Every sentence you learn is a drop. Every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta  Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo. FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com [https://www.learnigbonow.com/] - Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/learnigbo] Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgboforKids]  Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year.  Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop.  And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.

30. juni 202610 min
episode Learn Igbo: The Past Tense as Remembrance — A Question 220 Years in the Making (EXTENDED) | Igbo Daily Drops (S2 E96) Week 20 cover

Learn Igbo: The Past Tense as Remembrance — A Question 220 Years in the Making (EXTENDED) | Igbo Daily Drops (S2 E96) Week 20

A woman from Atlanta walks into a spare parts market in Accra carrying a  photograph of an 1803 slave manifest. The word written beside her  ancestor's listed age is: Ibo. In this episode of Igbo Daily Drops, you'll learn 3 Igbo past tense  phrases — the sentences that prove your yesterday existed and was worth  recording. The Igbo past tense is not grammar. It is attestation. For the more than  one million Igbo people dispersed across the Atlantic by the transatlantic  slave trade, the simple act of reporting yesterday's actions — what you  did, where you went, who rested — was a form of civic existence that  enslavement systematically destroyed. This episode documents the living  intersection of Igbo oral tradition, diaspora identity, and the  marketplace as the primary institution of Igbo civilisational life. Research in this episode draws on Michael Gomez, New York University,  1998 — who estimated that the Bight of Biafra contributed nearly one  quarter of all Africans brought into North America — and Jennifer  Hildebrand, State University of New York Fredonia, 2006, whose research  demonstrates that Igbo captives in the Americas maintained a strong  pan-Igbo identity and offered instruction to new arrivals from Igboland. 📖 Today's proverb: Onye ajụjụ anaghị efu ụzọ — One who asks questions  does not lose their way. 🗣️ Sentences practised today: 1. Ginị ka i mere unyaahụ? — What did you do yesterday? 2. A gara m ahịa unyaahụ. — I went to the market yesterday. 3. Ha zuru ike unyaahụ. — They rested yesterday. 📥 Free Speaking Workbook: learnigbonow.com 🏛️ By every measure UNESCO uses to assess a language's vitality — intergenerational transmission, community attitudes, government support —  Igbo is vulnerable. This podcast documents Igbo intangible cultural  heritage — oral traditions, social practices, rituals, and knowledge  systems — while teaching conversational Igbo to diaspora learners  worldwide. Every episode is part of the Igbo Daily Drops Living Archive. Hosted by Yvonne Chioma Mbanefo — Heritage Futurist and Daughter of the Soil. ▶️ Watch the visual version on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgbo/podcasts 🎧 Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/iddspot 🎧 Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/iddapple 🌐 learnigbonow.com Every sentence you learn is a drop. Every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta  Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo. FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com [https://www.learnigbonow.com/] - Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/learnigbo] Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgboforKids]  Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year.  Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop.  And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.

29. juni 202612 min
episode Week 19 Omnibus: Learn Igbo Through Stories | 5 Complete Episodes cover

Week 19 Omnibus: Learn Igbo Through Stories | 5 Complete Episodes

🎧 WEEK 19 OMNIBUS: All 5 Episodes in One Continuous Session Missed the daily drops this week? This omnibus combines all five complete    episodes from Week 19 of Igbo Daily Drops—no breaks, no interruptions, just pure immersive storytelling, language instruction, and scholarly documentation of Igbo intangible cultural heritage.    The episode titles in Week 19 are:  Episode 91 - Travel & the Past — The Priest Who Had No Army (EXTENDED)  Episode 92 - Past Tense Eating — The Recipe That Remembered  Episode 93 - Rest, Sleep & Play — The Compound That Was Always a Classroom (EXTENDED)  Episode 94 - Past Tense — The Grammar of Belonging (EXTENDED)  Episode 95 - Past Actions — The Day Two People Did the Same Thing (EXTENDED) 🗣️ WHAT YOU'LL LEARN: 15 essential Igbo phrases from talking about eating and sleeping, talking about going home and talking about resting. Perfect for diaspora learners reconnecting with their heritage, language  students, or anyone interested in Igbo culture and intangible cultural  heritage preservation. This has been Igbo Daily Drops with Yvonne Mbanefo. FREE RESOURCES: - Igbo Heritage Family Kit: https://learnigbonow.com [https://www.learnigbonow.com/] - Main Channel: @learnigbo on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/learnigbo] Kids' Channel: @learnigboforkids on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@LearnIgboforKids]  Our Mission: Raise 10,000 more next-generation Igbo speakers by next year.  Be one of them. Every sentence you learn is a drop.  And every drop feeds Oké Osimiri Mmụta Igbo — the Ocean of Igbo Knowledge. Subscribe now. Foundation episodes begin today.

28. juni 20261 h 5 min