Jump to content

Ɔhwɛ (Observation)

Ɛfi Wikipedia
Wɔatwerɛ nsɛm wei ɛwɔ Asante kasa mu

Ɔhwɛ yɛ ɔkwan titire a wɔfa so yɛ nhwehwɛmu. Yei kyerɛ sɛ, wo hwehwɛ nnipa anaa nneɛma bi a ɛkɔ so wɔ baabi, deɛ wote na wo twerɛ ato hɔ.[1] Saa kwan yi ma nhwehwɛmufoɔ no nya nsɛm pii a wɔmfa kwan afoforɔ bi te sɛ, nsɛm a wɔrebisabisa nkurɔfoɔ so.[2]

Mfasoɔ baako a ɛwɔ saa nhwehwɛmu kwan no so ne sɛ, ama yɛanya nsɛm bi ho nteaseɛ ɛmu dɔ na yɛte deɛ yɛresua no ase yie. Yei boa ma nhwehwɛmufoɔ no hunu nneɛma bi a anka wɔbɛtumi abu wɔn ani agu so.[3]

Baabi A Menyaa Mmoa Firiiɛ

[sesa]
  1. "Observation", Taylor & Francis (in English), 2017-10-12, doi:10.4324/9781315456539-26/observation-louis-cohen-lawrence-manion-keith-morrison, retrieved 2025-08-27
  2. Neil Cowie (2009), Juanita Heigham, Robert A. Croker (ed.), "Observation", Qualitative Research in Applied Linguistics: A Practical Introduction (in English), London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 165–181, doi:10.1057/9780230239517_8, ISBN 978-0-230-23951-7, retrieved 2025-08-27
  3. Jonathan Boote, Ann Mathews (1999-04-01), ""Saying is one thing; doing is another": the role of observation in marketing research", Qualitative Market Research: An International Journal, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 15–21, doi:10.1108/13522759910251909, ISSN 1352-2752, retrieved 2025-08-27