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Kyawkyaw

Ɛfi Wikipedia
Wɔatwerɛ nsɛm wei ɛwɔ Asante kasa mu

Kyawkyaw anaa ahenema yɛ mpaboa a amammerɛ kwan so, Akanfoɔ de siesie wɔn ho kɔ dwumadie ahodoɔ ase. Ɛka Akanfoɔ afadeɛ no ho. Kane no, na wɔn a wɔnyɛ saaa mpaboa yi yɛ adehyeɛ sɛ ebi a ahemfo, ahemaa ɛna ahemfo mpanimfoɔ[1]. Afadeɛ wɔfa de ka kyawkyaw ho ne ntoma, kɔnmɔadeɛ, mpatia ne deɛ ɛkeka ho.[2]

Ɛnyɛ mpaboa a wɔhyɛ no daadaa. Dwumadie soronko ase nko na wɔtaa hyɛ de kɔ. Dwumadie ahodoɔ a wobɛtae ahunu kyawkyaw no bi wɔ aseɛ ne afahyɛ, ayɛyɛ, abadintoɔ ne deɛ ɛkeka ho.[3]

Baabi a mmoa firi

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  1. Paul Agoe (2021), "Not Just Clothes: The Importance of Traditional Clothes to Ghanaians in Oldenburg", Ghana Studies, vol. 24, no. 24, pp. 17–41, ISSN 2333-7168, retrieved 2025-08-29
  2. Evelyn Omotunde Adepeko, Michael Abiodun Oyinloye, Adesimi Oluwa Adepeko, Adebayo Abiodun Adeloye (2023-12-21), "Preserving Traditional Clothing Identity: An Overview of the Past and Present Uses of Aso-Oke by the Ondo People of Southwest, Nigeria", Journal of Urban Culture Research (in English), vol. 27, pp. 75–88, doi:10.14456/jucr.2023.24, ISSN 2408-1213, retrieved 2025-08-29{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. Paul Agoe (2021), "Not Just Clothes: The Importance of Traditional Clothes to Ghanaians in Oldenburg", Ghana Studies, vol. 24, no. 24, pp. 17–41, ISSN 2333-7168, retrieved 2025-08-29