Yay! Finally! They're all in my hands! 🥳🥳
MUAHAHAHAHAH!!!
Topolino #3608 with a story in Catanese (distributed in Sicily), Milanese (Lombardy), Neapolitan (Campania) and Fiorentino (Tuscany)... plus the italian version for commoners.
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Yay! Finally! They're all in my hands! 🥳🥳
MUAHAHAHAHAH!!!
Topolino #3608 with a story in Catanese (distributed in Sicily), Milanese (Lombardy), Neapolitan (Campania) and Fiorentino (Tuscany)... plus the italian version for commoners.
I've always found it a little sad that English is the 'universal language' because in spoken and written art other languages can just convey so much more and be so much more poetic - and translations could not ever wish to represent this rich symbolism inherently baked into a language. This ends up resulting in an effect where what is likely the best spoken/written art is often inaccessible to most people; which I think is a shame.
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Nigeria junior schools to teach in local languages, not English
The new policy is to promote the use of Nigeria’s 625 local languages, but implementation remains uncertain.
The Nigerian government has approved a new National Language Policy that will mandate the use of local languages as a language of instruction for primary school pupils and remove English.
The policy was announced by Nigeria’s Minister of Education Adamu Adamu on Wednesday after it was approved by the Federal Executive Council (FEC) in a meeting presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari, local media reported.
“[T]he government has agreed now that, henceforth, instruction in primary schools; the first six years of learning will be in the mother tongue,” the minister was quoted as saying.
English is Nigeria’s official language. It is also the language of instruction in all levels of education.
The objective of the new policy is “to promote, and enhance the cultivation and use of all Nigerian languages,” Adamu said.
There are about 625 local languages in Nigeria, he said, and the policy would be applied nationally.
”Since the first six years of school should be in the mother tongue. Whereby the pupil is, the language of the host community is what will be used,” he explained.
Adamu said that after the exclusive use of local languages for the first six years of school, the mother tongue would then be combined with English at the junior secondary level.
While the new policy has officially taken effect, it is more in principle, the minister added, as full implementation will only happen once more preparatory work has been done.
“Theoretically, this policy starts from today, but the use of mother tongue is exclusive, but we need time to develop the material, get the teachers and so on,” he said on Wednesday.
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Despite several schemes run by the government for the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), not many industries are able to take benefit of them. In fact, there is an information gap between the government and the industries on the ground which fails outreach and implementation of the schemes effectively.