People // Nick Smyth // Blog
Tuesday January 09, 2007 at 09:05 AM |
I wonder what indaba means and also if abadni means anything.
And if you had a white horse and brought it upstairs, could it not go back down? Or is that just cows?
Tuesday January 09, 2007 at 09:05 AM |
Thursday January 11, 2007 at 01:16 PM
The meaning has a lot to do with what this site is all about...getting people together to collaborate and discuss new things...
As for the horse, I'm not sure. I have heard that about cows though.
Thursday January 25, 2007 at 12:51 PM
indaba
from Zulu
This word originated in South Africa
When the rest of the world goes to meetings and conventions, South Africa proclaims its African heritage by holding indabas.
<http://www.answers.com/topic/indaba>
English-speaking South Africans learned the word from Zulu chiefs, who would call their people together to discuss important issues at meetings called indabas. In the nineteenth century, when the word was first used in English, it always referred to the African tribes. An 1894 article, for example, reports that "a message was therefore conveyed ... to the King, inviting Umtassa to come to an indaba at Umtali."
Not surprisingly, in the latter part of the twentieth century Nelson Mandela's African National Congress party used the word for its meetings. "More than three thousand delegates are expected at the African National Congress's fiftieth national conference to be held here next week," reported the Klerksdorp Record in December 1997. "This four-day ANC Indaba ... will be officially opened by the provincial chairperson of the ANC." But today's pro-African South Africa has indabas for everyone. In recent years there have been a Dance Indaba, a Tourism Trade Indaba, an International Design Indaba, a Structural Chemistry Indaba, a Small-Molecules Indaba, and a Welding Indaba. The 10th Biennial Congress of the Hypertension Society of Southern Africa in 1996, with the goal of improving health care for all South Africans, was billed as the "Hypertension Indaba."
Also contributing to the spirit of the new South Africa are Cape Indaba Wines. Their maker explains that "a portion of the profits generated from the sale of the Cape Indaba Wines will be donated to the underprivileged for the purposes of education. This contribution, coupled with the ethnically styled label emphasizes our commitment to the upliftment and furtherance of our new nation."
Zulu is spoken by about nine million people in South Africa, nearly a quarter of the population. It is a Bantu language of the Niger-Congo language family. Other English words from zulu include buchu (1731), a medicinal shrub; mamba (1862), a poisonous snake; impala (1875), the famous antelope; and nagana (1895), a disease of cattle also called tsetse disease.
Tuesday February 20, 2007 at 07:57 PM
indaba is a himalayan street fighter that refuses to yield even though he has been thoroughly defeated both physically and emotionally by a pack of dingo dogs
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