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Translating Open-Ended Questions in Cross-Cultural Qualitative Research: A Comprehensive Framework. [PDF]
de Jesús-Espinosa T +20 more
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Community and health systems learning: critical realist evaluation of the VAPAR 'learning platform' in rural South Africa 2015-25. [PDF]
Witter S +9 more
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2023
The Tsonga are a group of Bantu-speaking people who have historically lived in what is now Mozambique and South Africa. This entry focuses on the Ronga sub-group around the time of 1895, and relies predominantly upon information recorded by the principal ethnographic authority (Junod, 1927ab).
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The Tsonga are a group of Bantu-speaking people who have historically lived in what is now Mozambique and South Africa. This entry focuses on the Ronga sub-group around the time of 1895, and relies predominantly upon information recorded by the principal ethnographic authority (Junod, 1927ab).
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Folklore, 1979
THE Tsonga number about 1,200,000, and live in an arid area of the Northern Transvaal and Mozambique, where rain can mean the difference between adequate food and starvation. The songs which they sing strongly reflect their needs and their anxieties. The texts of Tsonga rain songs emphasize the lightning bird of misfortune, black millipedes as a sign ...
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THE Tsonga number about 1,200,000, and live in an arid area of the Northern Transvaal and Mozambique, where rain can mean the difference between adequate food and starvation. The songs which they sing strongly reflect their needs and their anxieties. The texts of Tsonga rain songs emphasize the lightning bird of misfortune, black millipedes as a sign ...
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Tsonga literatures: past, present and future
South African Journal of African Languages, 2001In this paper, we aim firstly to make sense of the historical, social and political factors that have influenced the development of the literary texts of the languages of the Tsonga language group. Secondly, we will try to understand these texts as a literary system—or systems. Focus will also fall on the people who initiated and created these literary
Mary C Bill, Isaac D Mathumba
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The Journal of American Folklore, 1973
THE TSONGA ARE A BANTU-SPEAKING PEOPLE numbering about 1,200,000 in Mozambique and 700,000 in the Northern Transvaal. They distinguish themselves from the Tonga of Zambia and Rhodesia, and from the Tonga of the Inhambane area, by the use of a prefix; thus, Shangana-Tsonga, Soshangane being the name of a celebrated nineteenth-century Tsonga warlord, and
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THE TSONGA ARE A BANTU-SPEAKING PEOPLE numbering about 1,200,000 in Mozambique and 700,000 in the Northern Transvaal. They distinguish themselves from the Tonga of Zambia and Rhodesia, and from the Tonga of the Inhambane area, by the use of a prefix; thus, Shangana-Tsonga, Soshangane being the name of a celebrated nineteenth-century Tsonga warlord, and
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African Arts, 1974
(TOP) 1. A COURT MUSICIAN PLAYS A XIZAMBI FRICTION BOW AT THE MEETING OF THE CHIEF'S COUNCIL HELD TO CONFIRM THE WOMEN'S DECISION TO BEGIN THE KHOMBA. (BOTTOM) 2. A GIRL INITIATE PLAYS A XIPENDANA BRACED BOW ON HER WAY TO THE ASSEMBLY POINT. The Tsonga are a Bantu-speaking people of southeastern Africa, numbering about 1,200,000 in Mozambique and 700 ...
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(TOP) 1. A COURT MUSICIAN PLAYS A XIZAMBI FRICTION BOW AT THE MEETING OF THE CHIEF'S COUNCIL HELD TO CONFIRM THE WOMEN'S DECISION TO BEGIN THE KHOMBA. (BOTTOM) 2. A GIRL INITIATE PLAYS A XIPENDANA BRACED BOW ON HER WAY TO THE ASSEMBLY POINT. The Tsonga are a Bantu-speaking people of southeastern Africa, numbering about 1,200,000 in Mozambique and 700 ...
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