Love the music track; your content is getting better and better! : "Sound like you need to get a record deal"🤣🤣 The language is beautiful and fascinating!
Iam Xhosa to the core from the Tshawe clan and I can safely say that is not how Xhosa speaking people speak. Xolani was just giving you a tongue twisting excercise. Zulus and Xhosas have the same number of clicks but Xhosas are very emphatic when they speak and the clicks are quite audible. Anyway learn Zulu and you will be able to communicate with more than 60% of black people in SA, because Zulus and Xhosas constitute around 50% of the black population and if you include Swatis and Ndebeles that are also part of the broader Nguni group the percentage increases exponentially. Thank you again for choosing SA, I am sure you will enjoy this country. I wish you guys came very early on in your lives to SA. Judging by your enthusiasm and love for this country I think you would have contributed positively to our development.
Strange that this guy, probably part of Zulu ignorence, this guy is standing on the land of Bakwena, Lesedi Village an ethnic group of Batswana, who roam the Northern - Western parts of the Gauteng for centuries, from the early 1000 at least, centuries before the colonial South Africa, however, he made no mention of Batswana in his presentation. 😳😳😳
@@lindelwanothandongcobo8863 Batswana in Botswana comes from South Africa, Batswana settled in Gauteng, Northwest and Northern Cape when they entered SA from east Africa in the 8th Century together with Nguni people, Nguni people went south to coastal areas, he is right while Batswana remain in the North until they split into Basotho and Bapedi. Go learn your history