|
| Ihe | = | Into | into |
| Vb’ihe | = | X | Multiplication |
| Yan/Yaen | = | And | And |
| Kevbe | = | + | Add or Plus |
| ẹirrọ | = | - | Menos |
| Afian | = | / or ÷ | Divide |
| Ukhionmwen | = | 1/2 | Half |
| ọrẹ / ọre / ẹrẹ / ẹr'ọh | = | ( = [is] | Equal to / is |
| Vbe | = | in, and, of | In |
| Debae | = | (+) | With |
| Deghe / Deghẹ | = | If | If |
| ukhun | = | Xⁿ | To power |
| ukhun eva | = | V² | To power 2 (V² |
| Afian ihe eva | = | ½ | Divide into 2 |
| Afian ihe eha | = | ⅓ | Divide into 3 |
| Afian ihe enen | = | ¼ | Divide into 4 |
| Afian ihe isen | = | ⅕ | Divide into 5 |
| Isen vb’ihe ukhun eirrọ vbe ọkpa | = | 5⁻¹/ 1/5¹ | 5 to power menos 1 |
| ẹirrọ vbe ọkpa | = | -V + 1 | Bellow 1 , V < 1 |
| ọkpa ẹirrọ | = | +V - 1 | X => 1 menos 1 |
| Totọ ehia /Totọ | = | Total / Sum | “The total of all…” |
| Ni /na | = | That | That |
| Ah,ih,oh,eh,ẹh,uh | = | h(a,i,o,ọ,e,ẹ,u) | Add-in-Vowel / Pronoun |
Pronunciation and usage of new words
not common or present in Edo grammar:
Every new word (English, Latin, French
or Spanish) are written and pronounce base on Edo alphabet,
consonants and vowel sounds. E.g. International = intanasiona,
chemistry = kẹmisiri (note: no “ch” in Edo consonants), Nigeria
= Naigirria, etc.
Given generally acceptable name compose
with Edo consonant, vowel and alphabet with its corresponding
interpretation for recognition and utility. E.g. “Space Science”
space = Idagbo ne ọh rr'iso / Idagbiso. Idagbo means empty / open
place/space while “Iso” is “sky”. Empty place in the sky
(planet space) could be represented in Edo as “Idagbiso”.
“Science” could be applied as “saensi” or sanyensi and “Space
Science” interpreted “Sanyensi Idagbiso”
“V” and “X”
“V” was used in place of letter “X”
on above symbols because letter "X"do not exist in Edo
Alphabets. Any word that take X is translated as "zi" in
Edo Grammar . e.g. Oxford =Ọzifọdi
Ukhun (to power “V²”
ukhun = 1. Up (e.g odẹ ukhun also
writing as “odukhun” or “od´ukhun” (“ode”=way / part /
route)) /. 2. Medicine. 3. Raise “to power” in mathematical terms
]
Two numbers combine to mean one
Two or more numbers combine to mean
one, indicate multiplication of said numbers. E.g.(a) “iyisen isen”
i.e.100 x 5 = 500 (b) “uri iyisen ekigbesiyeha” refers 200 x 100
x 50 =1,000,000 (one million)
Accent on letter “ẹ” or “ọ”
We are told in English that an accent
is a manner of pronunciation peculiar to a particular individual,
location, or nation. An accent may identify the locality in which its
speakers reside (a geographical or regional accent), the
socio-economic status of its speakers, their ethnicity, their caste
or social class, their first language (when the language in which the
accent is heard is not their native language), and so on. Accents
typically differ in quality of voice, pronunciation of vowels and
consonants, stress, and prosody; although grammar, semantics,
vocabulary, and other language characteristics often vary
concurrently with accent, the word 'accent' refers specifically to
the differences in pronunciation and the word 'dialect' encompasses
the broader set of linguistic differences; often 'accent' is a subset
of 'dialect'. Edo accent in this case is to dinstinguish
pronounciation of three basic letters and vowel sound e and ẹ, o
and ọ, inclusively y and ý.
Edo accent could mean amukhun (up
accent like in "ý") and amotọ (down accent as in “ẹ”
and “ọ”, [Ama = Mark, Ukhun = up,(although “Ukhun” also
means “medicine” Odukhun as upward and odẹ as way/path]
Accent on “ẹ” and “ọ” in
Edo language is to be at the bottom of corresponding letters while
"ý" (new letter introduce by this author) takes accent
upwards. “ẹ” sound like egg, earth, death, etc while “ọ”
sound like bought, dot, door, four.
Names of persons could take capital
letters for easy identification and recognition in Edo language like
in English language. E.g. Uyi, Ogieva, Ọmonsigho, Agbonlahor,
Ẹdokpọlor etc.
Names could also be notified with
capital letters
E.g Naigiria, Edo, Ọba, Osanobua,
Amerika, Eko (lagos) etc.
Eliminating use of “e” before noun.
E.g. e-Toni, e-Naigiria The use of “e”
before nouns should be totally removed to allow free flow of speech,
reading and writing easy, constructive and legible.
Instead of:e-Toni w'uh wẹdo / Tony
extend his greetings to you
Better: Toni w'uh(we uh) wẹ do / Toni
we do
Accents are:
(1) necessary to differentiate the
sound of vowel “ẹ ” from “ e” and "ọ" from "o"
E.g. (i) as in: owọrọ, obọ, etc. This also applies to no
identical letters with variation on vowel sound in a word like
owiẹ-morning, ẹkọ-custard, egbọ-planting, ẹdo-Edo,
ọghomwen-mine, ẹgbo-bush etc,
(2) necessary if vowel sound of
identical letter e and ẹ varies in the sound of a word with neither
having “n” as proceeding letter. E.g. ọdọ, ẹdẹ, ẹgbẹ,
ọghẹdẹ, ọfọ, etc
(3) necessary when vowel sound “ẹ”
or “ọ” varies in sound too, with niether having letter “n”
as proceeding letter. E.g. (a) ọkpa, ọgban (sound as in color,
culture, taught etc). (b) “ẹ” as in “ẹkpo” (sound as in
health, egg, get, etc)
(4)necessary if after "en" or
"on" , there appears another vowel sound as a third letter.
(as in the case of most Edo nouns or names.) E.g , Enogie, Eni, etc.
(5) Not necessary if “ẹ” takes
letter “n” as subsequent or proceeding letter. “en” in Edo
grammar, sounds as with vowel sound “ẹ” E.g. (a) iyisen (sound
as in tent, dent, fend,hen, ten, vent etc). Same applies if “ọ”
takes letter “n” as proceeding letter. E.g. (b) ihinron (sound as
in font, fond, don’t etc).
(6) Not necessary in "ne"
because "ne" already sound like "nen" as if have
"ẹ" and "n" added to it, as subsiquent letters.
(7)Again, not also necessary in "me"
because "me" already sound like "men" as if have
"ẹ" and "n" added to it, as subsiquent letters.
Apostrophe;
According to wikipedia, an apostrophe
is used in English to indicate possession. The practice ultimately
derives from the Old English genitive case: the “of” case, itself
used as a possessive in many languages. The genitive form of many
nouns ended with the inflection -es, which evolved into a simple -s
for the possessive ending. An apostrophe was later added to replace
the omitted e, not his as is and was widely believed. In English, the
apostrophe ( ’ , often rendered as ' ) is a punctuation mark, and
sometimes a diacritic mark, in languages that use the Latin alphabet
or certain other alphabets. it serves two main purposes: the omission
of one or more letters (as in the contraction of does not to
doesn’t), and the marking of possessive cases (as in the cat’s
whiskers).
Similarly, apostrophes in Edo language
are to notify missing letter (ikpẹmwen) not pronounce or written
after or before a complete word at the begining or extreme, when
reading or writing a sentence. It could refers to:
(1) Two different word together.
(2) An omitted letter (Ikpẹmwen) e.g. “vb’ẹdugie” above. Left and right apostrophe NOT PROPER in btw words same time. e.g. vb’‘dugie
(3) once apostrophe is used in between words, there must not be a seperation. e.g. Ẹdo n'imose, Ogieva vb'Uwaila, etc.
(1) Two different word together.
(2) An omitted letter (Ikpẹmwen) e.g. “vb’ẹdugie” above. Left and right apostrophe NOT PROPER in btw words same time. e.g. vb’‘dugie
(3) once apostrophe is used in between words, there must not be a seperation. e.g. Ẹdo n'imose, Ogieva vb'Uwaila, etc.
Edo apostrophe could means “Amuke”
(‘ ’, [Ama = Mark, uke = top]Amuke n’oberọmwan = right
apostrophe while Amuke n’obiyọmwan= left apostrophe [Oberrọmwan
(“right hand” on literal translation) ought to be separated as
“obọ erra ọmwan” but join together to mean a single word.
Same applies to “obọ iye ọmwan” to “obiyọmwan” (“left
hand” on literal translation]
Writers could make use of right
apostrophe when next word has a vowel as its first letter i.e. “n’”
as in “Ọba n’ọkpọlor”/ Ọba is great. "Gioni we uh
rhuẹse" / Gioni w'uh rhuẹse"= John said thank you,
while left apostrophe when previous word ends in vowel letter.
Apostrophe “ ' ” is use when in two
words one ends with either "e" or "ẹ" and the
other starts with a vowel. e.g. Vbe ọh khin? = Vb'ọh khin? (What
is it?)
Example Aa:
John and Edugie came to campus
yesterday to greet Professor Omorodion
Gioni vbe Ẹdugie rrie kampọs nodẹ
do tue Profẹsor Ọmonrọdion. ..(Simple sentence)
Gioni vb’Ẹdugie rrie kampọs nodẹ
do tue Profẹsor Ọmonrọdion…. (Complex sentence)
(Debae means join while vbe = and, with
or plus.)
Example Ab:
Gioni debae Ẹdugie rie kampọs nodẹ
do tue Profẹsor Ọmonrọdion.
Gioni deba’Ẹdugie rie kampọs nodẹ
do tue Profẹsor Ọmonrọdion.
Example Ba:
I love Jully for her character.
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli zẹvbe uýinmwen
ne ọh mwen
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli zẹvb’uýinmwen
ne ọh mwen
Others could write and pronounce like:
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli zẹmw’uýinmwen
onren
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli zẹmw’uýinmwen
onren
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli vb’uýimwen onren
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli vb’uyimwen onren
Example Bb:
Me rhuẹmwen Giuli vb’uýimwen onren
Me rhuẹmwen Giuli zẹvb’uýimwen
onren
Me rhuẹmwen Giuli zẹmw’uýimwen
onren
Me rhuẹmwen Giuli zẹvb’uýinmwen
ne ọh mwen
Me rhuẹmwen Giuli zẹmw’uýinmwen
ne ọh mwen
Example Bc:
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli yẹ uýinmwen ne
ọh mwen
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli yẹ uýinmwen ne
ọh mwen
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli y’uýinmwen ne ọh
mwen
Ih rhuẹmwen Giuli y’uýinmwen onren
Apostrophe is necessary when
pronouncing two words to mean one and when making a complex sentence. No separation in between words that has
apostrophe applied to indicate pronounces as one word, which could
take the positions to be a noun in some cases. Usually indicating an
omission of a letter, usually “e”, “ẹ”, “ọ”, “o”
Silent Letter “r” and “h”
“R” is silence in pronunciations
while double “RR” is not. E.g. “ihinron”, “erenren”, uri
etc.
“h” is silent only when at extreme
in a word and mostly present with newly introduce words like: ọh,
ah, eh, ẹh, ih, uh (Applicable as adjective, pronoun and article)
e.g “the”, “you” etc
New “add-in-vowel” i.e.
h(a,i,o,ọ,e,ẹ,u) as “ah”, “eh”, “ẹh”, “ih”,
“ọh” “oh”, “uh” (mostly use as pronoun and adjective)
Have argued that all vowel sound that
represent a pronoun, should take letter “h” as to differentiate
it from a single alphabet or consonant i.e. (ah, uh, oh, ọh, eh,
ẹh, ih). E.g
(1) Ih rhuẹmwen wẹ = I love you.
(2) De ẹmwen n'uh ta maen nodẹ? = what did you tell him yesterday?. Ih = I , uh/wẹ = You , eh, ọh, ẹh = He/she :
(3) ọh zuọrọ rha? - Is he/she crazy?
(4) uh ghi tamaen - do tell him.
(5) Ih ma (ghi) kha vbe rriọ - I didn't say so
(6) ẹh ghi rre evbani - it's no longer there. As in the case of an article: a, the,
(7) eh dọkitọ ni, ona khin - this is the Doctor / that Doctor is this.
(1) Ih rhuẹmwen wẹ = I love you.
(2) De ẹmwen n'uh ta maen nodẹ? = what did you tell him yesterday?. Ih = I , uh/wẹ = You , eh, ọh, ẹh = He/she :
(3) ọh zuọrọ rha? - Is he/she crazy?
(4) uh ghi tamaen - do tell him.
(5) Ih ma (ghi) kha vbe rriọ - I didn't say so
(6) ẹh ghi rre evbani - it's no longer there. As in the case of an article: a, the,
(7) eh dọkitọ ni, ona khin - this is the Doctor / that Doctor is this.
“Eh” will help very much to
distinguish it from "e". E.g.
(8)“Osato ẹr'ọh khuẹ eh kẹpkẹyẹ ni fua” meaning “Osato drove the duck away” You can see that “eh” above represent “the”. This only apply when what begin the noun is not a vowel sound (a,o,ọ,u,i,e,ẹ,)
(8)“Osato ẹr'ọh khuẹ eh kẹpkẹyẹ ni fua” meaning “Osato drove the duck away” You can see that “eh” above represent “the”. This only apply when what begin the noun is not a vowel sound (a,o,ọ,u,i,e,ẹ,)
(9) “Ogieva ẹr'ọh
yaen owa ni” (Ogieva is the owner of that house) meaning “Ogieva
owns that house” you could see that “Ogieva” and “Owa” has
no need of “eh”. ( The man is quity / that man is quity /that man
takes the guilty / okpia ni ẹr'ọh rrie abe (okpia-man, ni-that,
ẹr'ọh-is, ọh-the, rie-takes, abe-quit) / okpia ni rie abe
(10) Eh vbe ah kor ọrẹ ah rror - You reap what you sow (Benin proverb). See tables for more illustration:-
(10) Eh vbe ah kor ọrẹ ah rror - You reap what you sow (Benin proverb). See tables for more illustration:-
Table
1
| 1 | Nosa we uh wẹ do Nosa we n'uh wẹ do Nosa we, wẹ do |
Nosa says to you greetings Nosa says to you greetings Nosa greet you |
| 2 | Nosa w'uwa do | Nosa said to you greetings Nosa extend greetings to you |
| 3 | Nosa we ne uwa do | Nosa said to you greetings |
| 4 | Nosa we n’uwa do | Nosa said to you greetings |
(i) N’uh is a combinations of “ne”
and “uh” meaning “to” is the mending of “that” and
“you”
(ii) W'uh is a combination of "we"
and "uh" i.e. "said" and "to"
(iii) Use of “ẹ” in “wẹ”
as a pronoun (meaning you) as in table 1 indicates it is a
singular pronoun while the use of “a” as in “uwa” in table
1 and 2 refers to “you” of a plural pronoun “all”
Table 2
| 1 | Ogieva ẹr'ọh yaen owa ni | Ogieva is owner of that house |
| 2 | Ogieva yaen owa ni | Ogieva owns that house |
| 3 | Ogieva ẹr'ọh yaen owa ni | Ogieva is the owner of that house |
Table 3
| 1 | Osato khuẹ eh kẹpkẹyẹ fua | Osato drove the duck away |
| 2 | Osato ẹr'ọh khuẹ eh kẹpkẹyẹ ni fua | Osato is the one who drove that duck away |
| 3 | Osato ọr'ọh khuẹ eh kẹpkẹyẹ ni fua | Osato is the one that drove the duck away |
·
Ah ighi mien ebe ne ọbar..= he/she
can no more get red paper. "ah ighi" is use in
negative sense. "ai" only use in the case of a
noun..i.e. when writing a name of a person. e.g. Aibuedefe,
Uwaifioku, Aigbobo, etc. "ẹh ighi" ,and "ah ighi"
is also represented by other scholars as "ẹi" and
"ai".
"ghi / gha" (positive or negative as
the case may be)
"r" (silent) e.g owọrọ, evbare
while "rr" (sound heavy) e.g. rrie, rra, rrerre,
"ẹ"
(accent necessary only without "n" as the next letter).
Sound likeiden, aden, owen.
"ọ" (accent necessary
without "r" as the next letter ). Sound like dọlor, kor,
gbor, vior, talor, tọlor, vọlor, tieyor, bor, zuor, fior, gor,
lor, kuor, vor, yor, zor.
"on" do not need accent on
"o" : whenever there is" n" after "ọ"
, accent on "o" is no longer necessary because sound as if
its already there. e.g. Osamwonyi not Osamwọnyi, Ihion not ihiọn,
ihinron not ihinrọn.
"j ": Not present in Edonaze
alphabet. e.g. John (in english) is translated as Gioni. , "gi"
is the equivalent translation of j.
"y" (as in
iyobo)(light sound, tongue roll). sound like yo, yogut, young, etc,
while "ý" (tongue touch up and sleep, mount wide as in
iýan, iýen) sound like yankky, yank, etc. (combination of j / y in
pronounciation)
"q" not present in Edonaze but
takes "kui" or "ki" as equivalent as the
case may be. E.g queen = kuini.
Letter “c” is written and
pronounce as “k”(ka) as in kampọs/campus while like in circle =
saiko
"rh" is use when the pronounciation is
dragging between r/h. e.g. rhen, rhuẹse, rhuẹmwen, etc.
In
Most cases, na sound "nan", ni as "nin", no as
"non", ma as "man", me as "men", and mo
as "mon"
Totọ eh hia
|
||||
ọkpa
|
(x)Vb’ihe | ọkpa |
1 x 1
|
ọkpa |
eva
|
(x)Vb’ihe | eva |
2 x 2
|
enẹn |
eha
|
(x)Vb’ihe | eha |
3 x 3
|
ihinrin |
enẹn
|
(x)Vb’ihe | enẹn |
4 x 4
|
enẹn ẹi rrọ vbe ugie |
isen
|
(x)Vb’ihe | isen |
5 x 5
|
isen yaen ugie |
ehan
|
(x)Vb’ihe | ehan |
6 x 6
|
enẹn ẹi rrọ vbe iyeva |
ihinron
|
(x)Vb’ihe | ihinron |
7 x 7
|
ọkpa ẹi rrọ vbe ekigbe s´iyeha |
erenren
|
(x)Vb’ihe | erenren |
8 x 8
|
enẹn yaen iyeha |
ihinrin
|
(x)Vb’ihe | ihinrin |
9 x 9
|
ọkpa yaen iyenẹn |
igbe
|
(x)Vb’ihe | igbe |
10 x 10
|
iyisen |
iyisen
|
(x)Vb’ihe | iyisen |
100 x 100
|
arriaisen igbe |
arriaisen
|
(x)Vb’ihe | arriaisen |
1000 x 1000
|
Ẹbo |
arriaisen igbe
|
(x)Vb’ihe | arriaisen igbe |
10,000 x 10,000
|
Ẹbo iyisen |
arriaisen iyisen
|
(x)Vb’ihe | arriaisen iyisen |
100,000 x 100,000
|
Ẹbo arriaisen igbe |
Ẹbo
|
(x)Vb’ihe | Ẹbo |
1,000,000 x 1,000,000
|
Ẹbo Ẹbo |
(Ulaba x Ulaba)
|
Vbe Ukhun eva (to Power V² |
Equal to (ọrẹ
|
Total
|
Totọ eh hia | √ - Square root | |
1²
|
ọkpa vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
ọkpa²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
1
|
ọkpa | |
2²
|
eva vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
eva²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
4
|
enẹn | 16 |
3²
|
eha vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
eha²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
9
|
ihinrin | 81 |
4²
|
enẹn vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
enẹn²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
16
|
enẹn ẹi rrọ vbe ugie | 256 |
5²
|
isen vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
isen²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
25
|
isen yaen ugie | 625 |
6²
|
ehan vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
ehan²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
36
|
enẹn ẹi rrọ vbe iyeva | 1296 |
7²
|
ihinron vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
ihinron²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
49
|
ọkpa ẹi rrọ vbe ekigbesiyeha | 2401 |
8²
|
erenren vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
erenren²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
64
|
enẹn yaen iyeha | 4096 |
9²
|
ihinrin vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
ihinrin²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
81
|
ọkpa yaen iyenẹn | 6561 |
10²
|
Igbe vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
igbe²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
100
|
iyisen | 10 000 |
100²
|
Iyisen vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
iyisen²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
10,000
|
arriaisen igbe | 100 000 000 |
1000²
|
arriaisen vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
arriaisen²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
1,000,000
|
Ẹbo | 100 000 000 000 |
10,000²
|
arriaisen igbe vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
arriaisen igbe²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
100,000,000
|
Ẹbo iyisen | 10 000 000 000 000 000 |
100,000²
|
arriaisen iyisen vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
arriaisen iyisen²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
10,000,000,000
|
Ẹbo arriaisen igbe | 100 000 000 000 000 000 000 |
1,000,000²
|
Ẹbo vb’ihe ukhun eva
|
Ẹbo²
|
= (ọrẹ
|
1,000,000,000,000
|
Ẹbo Ẹbo | 1000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 |
Understanding Money
ITỌRỌ - ISELE - KOBO – NAIRA
| Vb’ihe (igbe-10) |
(x 10) vb’ihe igbe / (ọrẹ (Edo) |
Totọ eh hia (#:K)
|
(Naira & Kobo)English
|
Total | ||||
(Itọrọ ọkpa
|
x 10) | = | Isele ọkpa |
00:10
|
(One kobo
|
x 10) | = | Ten kobo |
(Isele ọkpa
|
x 10) | = | Naira ọkpa |
01:00
|
(Ten kobo
|
x 10) | = | One naira |
(Naira ọkp
|
x 10) | = | Ikpen isen (2 x 5) |
10:00
|
(One naira
|
x 10) | = | Ten naira |
(Ikpen isen (2 x 5
|
x 10) | = | Ikpen ekigbesiyeha (2 x 50) |
100:00
|
(Ten naira
|
x 10) | = | Hundred naira |
(Ikpen ekigbesiyeha (2 x 50
|
x 10) | = | Ẹkpo isen (200 x 5) |
1000:00
|
(Hundred naira
|
x 10) | = | One thousand naira |
(Ẹkpo isen (200 x 5
|
x 10) | = | Ẹkpo ekigbesiyeha (200 x 50) |
10,000:00
|
(One thousand naira
|
x 10) | = | Ten thousand naira |
(Ẹkpo ekigbesiyeha (200 x 50
|
x 10) | = | Ẹkpo iyisen isen (200 x 500) |
100,000:00
|
(Ten thousand naira
|
x 10) | = | Hundred thousand naira |
(Ẹkpo iyisen isen (200 x 500
|
x 10) | = | Ẹkpo arriaisen isen (200 x 1000 x 5) |
1,000,000:00
|
(Hundred thousand naira
|
x 10) | = | One million naira |
(Ẹkpo arriaisen isen (200 x 1000 x 5
|
x 10) | = | Ẹkpo arriaisen ekigbesiyeha (200 x 1000 x 50) |
10,000,000:00
|
(One million naira
|
x 10) | = | Ten million naira |
(Ẹkpo arriaisen ekigbesiyeha (200 x 1000 x 50
|
x 10) | = | Ẹkpo arriaisen iyisen isen (200 x 1000 x 100 x 5) |
100,000,000:00
|
(Ten million naira
|
x 10) | = | Hundred million naira |
(Ẹkpo arriaisen iyisen isen (200 x 1000 x 100 x 5
|
x 10) | = | Ẹkpo Ẹbo isen (200 x 1000 000 x 5) |
1,000,000,000:00
|
(Hundred million naira
|
x 10) | = | One Billion naira |
(Ẹkpo Ẹbo isen (200 x 1000 000 x 5
|
x 10) | = | Ẹkpo Ẹbo ekigbesiyeha (200 x 1000 000 x 50) |
10,000,000,000:00
|
(One Billion naira
|
x 10) | = | Ten Billion naira |
(Ẹkpo Ẹbo ekigbesiyeha (200 x 1000 000 x 50
|
x 10) | Ẹkpo Ẹbo iyisen isen (200 x 1000 000 x 500) |
100,000,000,000:00
|
(Ten Billion naira
|
x 10) | = | Hundred Billion naira | |
(Ẹkpo Ẹbo iyisen isen (200 x 1000 000 x 500
|
X 10) | Ẹkpo Ẹbo arriaisen isen (200 x 1000 000 x 5000) |
1,000,000,000,000:00
|
(Hundred Billion naira
|
x 10) | = | One Trillion | |
Note: itọrọ = kobo |
Totọ eh hia
|
||
isele
|
Note(Naira #)
|
(#:K)
|
#00:01K
|
||
1
|
#00:10K
|
|
10
|
1
|
#01:00K
|
100
|
10
|
#10:00K
|
1000
|
100
|
#100:00K
|
10,000
|
1000
|
#1000:00K
|
100,000
|
10,000
|
#10,000:00K
|
1,000,000
|
100,000
|
#100,000:00K
|
10,000,000
|
1,000,000
|
#1,000,000:00K
|
100,000,000
|
10,000,000
|
#10,000,000:00K
|
1,000,000,000
|
100,000,000
|
#100,000,000:00K
|
10,000,000,000
|
1,000,000,000
|
#1,000,000,000:00K
|
100,000,000,000
|
10,000,000,000
|
#10,000,000,000:00K
|
1,000,000,000,000
|
100,000,000,000
|
#100,000,000,000:00K
|
10,000,000,000,000
|
1,000,000,000,000
|
#1,000,000,000,000:00K
|
100,000,000,000,000
|
10,000,000,000,000
|
#10,000,000,000,000:00K
|
1,000,000,000,000,000
|
100,000,000,000,000
|
#100,000,000,000,000:00K
|
10,000,000,000,000,000
|
1,000,000,000,000,000
|
#1,000,000,000,000,000:00K
|
100,000,000,000,000,000
|
10,000,000,000,000,000
|
#10,000,000,000,000,000:00K
|
1,000,000,000,000,000,000
|
100,000,000,000,000,000
|
#100,000,000,000,000,000:00K
|
1 comment:
Meaning of some words in Edo Language
1). *Ẹdẹ - Day. Example. Ẹdẹ gbe nẹ
2). *Ẹrẹ - Today. Example. Ikpọnmwẹn Osa yẹ ẹdẹ n' ẹrẹ
3). *Ẹdẹhia - Everyday. Example, Ẹdehia a hia ruẹ emwin
4) *Nodẹ - Yesterday. Example, Nodẹ ẹrẹ ọ rre
5). *Nẹghẹdia - Two days ago.
6). *Nẹghẹdẹnẹ - Three days ago
7). *Nẹvusẹ - four days ago
8). *Nẹghẹdẹhan - five days ago
9). *Uzọla - week, Example, igha se vba, vbẹ uzọla nọde
10). *Akia - month
11). *Ukpo - year. Example, ukpo na ma mwẹn
12). *Nẹdẹ - in the old days
13). *Akhuẹ - tomorrow
14). *Ihiakhuẹ - next tomorrow
15). *Uniẹrẹ - four days time
16). *Usiẹrẹ - five days time
17). *Ẹdẹhanrẹ - six days time
18) *Ẹdẹbiri - all day. Example, Ẹdẹbiri ọ ya vbẹ odọ
19). *Ẹdẹgbe - daybreak or overnight
20) *Ẹdẹgbegbe - daily
21) *Ẹdẹgbedẹgbe - every day by day
22). *Ẹdẹruanre - eight days time
23). *Ẹdẹikẹdẹ - any day
24) *Ẹdikẹtin - resting day
25). *Ẹdẹrriọ - the other day.
26). *Ẹdẹso - some days
27). *Ẹghẹkẹghẹ - any time
28). *Nẹkporriọ - years ago
29). *Ẹdẹdẹmwẹndẹ - forever
30). *Tẹbitẹ - everlasting
31). *Ogbee - next year, example ogbee ma vbe dia ru
32). *Arriavbere - next life
33). *Ukponọdere - next year
34). *Nẹdẹso - some time ago
35). *Ugbẹnso - some times
36). *Kẹghẹkẹghẹ - any time
37). *vbẹdẹvbẹdẹ - any day
38). *Ẹdekẹn - no market day
39). *Owiẹ - morning
40). *Owiẹfioro - early in the morning. Example, Igha tie wẹ vbẹ owiẹfioro.
41). *Rhiọ - at dawn
42). *Avan - afternoon, Example, Ẹghẹ avan ọya rre
43). *Ogiavan - mid-afternoon
44). *Ota - evening
45). *Otakhuẹrrẹ - late evening
46). *Asọn - Night
47). *Ogiasọn - midnight
48). *Sin - for long
49). *Sinsianrhusin - for a very long time
50). *Rhinrinrin - continously
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