Please or Signup
  • Register

    All you need is a Jump.AFRICA account
    With your Jump.AFRICA account, you can use all our services, current and future...

    Register

    Welcome to the Jump.AFRICA Community

    Set a password which has at least 6 characters and it's better to contain uppercase and lowercase letters and numbers.

    Set a password which has at least 6 characters and it's better to contain uppercase and lowercase letters and numbers.

    Select type of Membership you want to open
  • EN

Communities,Groups & Societies4 posts

Why these 5 Nigerian cities speak pidgin English

  What is pidgin English?   Additionally called 'broken,' it is an English-based Creole received as a pseudo-most widely used language or broadly communicated in Nigeria's language.   Some, because of the variety of clans and lingo and the powerlessness to communicate in English with no guarantees, most Nigerians understand and talk pidgin as an essenti ...Read more
2021-03-12
1214 Views
1
94c992e9 b550 4a15 9d86 4ed7905a27db
  • Culture

The significance of caps in Nigerian men's traditional attire

Hats in conventional Nigerian clothing may have specific social importance or are just worn as an adornment.   Nigeria is a country with various societies, dialects, customs, and individuals, and out of the many, the powerful clans stay the Igbo, Yoruba, and Hausa-Fulani. For quite a long time, many clans wore their novel conventional clothing and procured certain mark styles in w ...Read more
2021-02-28
1298 Views
1
94c992e9 b550 4a15 9d86 4ed7905a27db
  • Culture

10 slangs only a Nigerian can understand

Each nation has unique customs, just as slangs, which are spoken all through the country.   There are slangs extraordinary to optional schools, college life, and even locales of the country in Nigeria.   Outsiders may struggle to understand this slang, and local people may struggle to clarify them. Here are a couple of the slangs novel to Nigeria road life. 1. Ehen! ...Read more
2021-02-28
1129 Views
1
94c992e9 b550 4a15 9d86 4ed7905a27db
  • Culture

Following complaints from transgender male consumers, Proctor and Gamble have announced their decision to remove the feminine logo from the packaging of its top sanitary product brand "Always."    In June 2019, transgender activist Ben Saunders reportedly contacted "Always" via Twitter, questioning the use of the feminine logo on the packaging. Furth ...Read more
2019-10-22
1357 Views
1
2375b81b b89c 4426 abb9 da7f679a2beb