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Nnwontoɔ Anwonsɛm(Ballad)

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Wɔatwerɛ nsɛm wei ɛwɔ Asante kasa mu

Nnwontoↄ anwonsεm yԑ anwonsԑm a ԑnne nsisisoↄ no, wↄahyehyԑ no te sԑ nnwom.[1] Ԑyԑ anwonsԑm tiawa, ԑwↄ nnwontobea, atenka ne adwenemu mfonin[2]. Yԑhunu sԑ ԑyԑ menkometirimu ԑsiane sԑ ԑtaa da ankorankora nneyԑeԑ ne n’atenka adi. Ͻtwerԑfoↄ no atenka na ԑtaa yԑ nhwԑsoↄ ma afoforↄ. Sԑ obi pԑ sԑ ↄkyerԑ sԑ biribi yԑ anwonsԑm a yԑto a, ԑsԑ sԑ ↄhwԑ atenka mapa a ↄnya firi anwonsԑm mu, ԑmu nsԑm, ne su, dwontobea ne ↄkwan a wↄfa so de to dwa. Methodist asↄre nnwom, Basere asↄre nnwom, Abibinnwom, kwadwom, nnwontoↄ anwonsԑn ne ade nyinaa yԑ ԑho nhwԑsoↄ.[3]

Nhyehyɛeɛ

[sesa]

Ԑnni nhyehyԑeԑ. Anwonsԑm a yԑto no bi ne abԑbusԑm anwonsԑm, amoma ne anwonsԑm a ԑwↄ nsensaneeԑ du-nnan.[4]

Baabi a mmoa firi

[sesa]
  1. K. Agyekum (2011), Akan Kasadwini (Akan Oral Literature) (in English), retrieved 2025-09-22
  2. Chris Heckmann on (2025-02-04), Different Types of Poems and Poem Structures — A Writer’s Guide (in American English), retrieved 2025-09-22
  3. What Is a Narrative Poem? 3 Different Types of Narrative Poems With Poetry Examples - 2025 (in English), retrieved 2025-09-22
  4. K. Agyekum (2011), Akan Kasadwini (Akan Oral Literature) (in English), retrieved 2025-09-22