Author: Uchenna Nwosu, MD, FACOG
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
ISBN: 1441578633
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 110
Book Description
Medical exploitation often occurs because a patient does not understand the nature of his or her illness. Consequently the patient falls prey to simple explanations, like nails in the body causing pain or obstructing the normal progress of labor and delivery. The aim of this book is to improve doctor-patient communication in Igbo language by establishing an Igbo medical vocabulary, which both the doctor and patient can understand and speak. Ancillary objectives include the following: • Assignment of names to some organ systems of the body that are currently unnamed in Igbo language, and explanation of their functions; • Assignment of names to disease-causing agents such as virus and bacteria, which are not visible with the naked eye; • Introduction of the concept of chronic disease such as hypertension and diabetes, which can only be controlled but not usually curable; • Introduction of modern cell biology in Igbo language. We have met many challenges in writing this book. First, we found that the Igbo language is rich in naming external parts of the body, but lacks words for some internal organs and organ systems, such as the endocrine organs, the retculoendothelial system, the vascular system, the lymphatic system, etc. It even lacks the concept of cells and tissues, so that organs are only understood as they appear to the naked eyes. Second, we noted that some organ systems are lumped together in Igbo language, even though each system has its distinct group of diseases. For instance there are no words to differentiate string-like structures in the body. Thus nerves, arteries, veins, tendons, ligaments, lymphatic vessels and even fascia are collectively known as akwara. Our charge was to name these parts individually in Igbo. Third, disease causing agents not visible with the naked eyes, such as bacteria and viruses are not known in Igbo language, and needed newly minted words. Perhaps the most difficult challenge we faced is the fact that Igbo language lacks the flexibility of the English language, which borrows its medical terms very liberally from Greek and Latin roots, to create words that did not exist in the language. For instance the word atherosclerosis is derived from the Greek root, athere, meaning gruel or dirt, and skiros, meaning hard. Since Igbo language lacks such close interaction with other languages, English-to-Igbo interpretation of medical terms becomes necessarily descriptive and long. Where we have interpreted a medical term with more than one Igbo word we have tried to preserve the essence of the term. For instance we have named atherosclerosis Atịtị ọwa ọbara, meaning dirt in the blood channel. We have emphasized the concept of chronic disease in contrast with the well understood model of acute illnesses. In this regard we have highlighted hypertension (Obara Mgbanni Elu) stroke (Ọtụọ ọkara), diabetes (Ọrịa shuga), heart attack (Ọkụkụ mkpụrụobi) and heart failure (Okuko afọ mkpụrụobi). This is particularly important because chronic diseases require lifetime treatment, unlike the familiar model of acute diseases, such as malaria (Ịba anwụ nta) or appendicitis (Amahịa mgbakwunye eriri afọ) that requires only brief or intermittent treatment. Since Igbo culture is technologically challenged, we have difficulty coming up with a language that reflects the technology of modern medicine, such as x-ray, ultrasound, centrifuge, CAT scan etc. We have not addressed medical technology in any detail in this issue. In introducing the fundamentals of modern concept of cell biology and genetics in Igbo language we have made it possible for secondary and post secondary school students to understand the structure and functions of the cell organelles the way they never did before. It is a significant departure: from memorization of just words, to explanation of th
English/Igbo Translation of Common Medical Terms NTAPỊ ASỤSỤ BEKEE ỤFỌDỤ NKE NDỊ DỌKỊTA N'ONU IGBO
Author: Uchenna Nwosu, MD, FACOG
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
ISBN: 1441578633
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 110
Book Description
Medical exploitation often occurs because a patient does not understand the nature of his or her illness. Consequently the patient falls prey to simple explanations, like nails in the body causing pain or obstructing the normal progress of labor and delivery. The aim of this book is to improve doctor-patient communication in Igbo language by establishing an Igbo medical vocabulary, which both the doctor and patient can understand and speak. Ancillary objectives include the following: • Assignment of names to some organ systems of the body that are currently unnamed in Igbo language, and explanation of their functions; • Assignment of names to disease-causing agents such as virus and bacteria, which are not visible with the naked eye; • Introduction of the concept of chronic disease such as hypertension and diabetes, which can only be controlled but not usually curable; • Introduction of modern cell biology in Igbo language. We have met many challenges in writing this book. First, we found that the Igbo language is rich in naming external parts of the body, but lacks words for some internal organs and organ systems, such as the endocrine organs, the retculoendothelial system, the vascular system, the lymphatic system, etc. It even lacks the concept of cells and tissues, so that organs are only understood as they appear to the naked eyes. Second, we noted that some organ systems are lumped together in Igbo language, even though each system has its distinct group of diseases. For instance there are no words to differentiate string-like structures in the body. Thus nerves, arteries, veins, tendons, ligaments, lymphatic vessels and even fascia are collectively known as akwara. Our charge was to name these parts individually in Igbo. Third, disease causing agents not visible with the naked eyes, such as bacteria and viruses are not known in Igbo language, and needed newly minted words. Perhaps the most difficult challenge we faced is the fact that Igbo language lacks the flexibility of the English language, which borrows its medical terms very liberally from Greek and Latin roots, to create words that did not exist in the language. For instance the word atherosclerosis is derived from the Greek root, athere, meaning gruel or dirt, and skiros, meaning hard. Since Igbo language lacks such close interaction with other languages, English-to-Igbo interpretation of medical terms becomes necessarily descriptive and long. Where we have interpreted a medical term with more than one Igbo word we have tried to preserve the essence of the term. For instance we have named atherosclerosis Atịtị ọwa ọbara, meaning dirt in the blood channel. We have emphasized the concept of chronic disease in contrast with the well understood model of acute illnesses. In this regard we have highlighted hypertension (Obara Mgbanni Elu) stroke (Ọtụọ ọkara), diabetes (Ọrịa shuga), heart attack (Ọkụkụ mkpụrụobi) and heart failure (Okuko afọ mkpụrụobi). This is particularly important because chronic diseases require lifetime treatment, unlike the familiar model of acute diseases, such as malaria (Ịba anwụ nta) or appendicitis (Amahịa mgbakwunye eriri afọ) that requires only brief or intermittent treatment. Since Igbo culture is technologically challenged, we have difficulty coming up with a language that reflects the technology of modern medicine, such as x-ray, ultrasound, centrifuge, CAT scan etc. We have not addressed medical technology in any detail in this issue. In introducing the fundamentals of modern concept of cell biology and genetics in Igbo language we have made it possible for secondary and post secondary school students to understand the structure and functions of the cell organelles the way they never did before. It is a significant departure: from memorization of just words, to explanation of th
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
ISBN: 1441578633
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 110
Book Description
Medical exploitation often occurs because a patient does not understand the nature of his or her illness. Consequently the patient falls prey to simple explanations, like nails in the body causing pain or obstructing the normal progress of labor and delivery. The aim of this book is to improve doctor-patient communication in Igbo language by establishing an Igbo medical vocabulary, which both the doctor and patient can understand and speak. Ancillary objectives include the following: • Assignment of names to some organ systems of the body that are currently unnamed in Igbo language, and explanation of their functions; • Assignment of names to disease-causing agents such as virus and bacteria, which are not visible with the naked eye; • Introduction of the concept of chronic disease such as hypertension and diabetes, which can only be controlled but not usually curable; • Introduction of modern cell biology in Igbo language. We have met many challenges in writing this book. First, we found that the Igbo language is rich in naming external parts of the body, but lacks words for some internal organs and organ systems, such as the endocrine organs, the retculoendothelial system, the vascular system, the lymphatic system, etc. It even lacks the concept of cells and tissues, so that organs are only understood as they appear to the naked eyes. Second, we noted that some organ systems are lumped together in Igbo language, even though each system has its distinct group of diseases. For instance there are no words to differentiate string-like structures in the body. Thus nerves, arteries, veins, tendons, ligaments, lymphatic vessels and even fascia are collectively known as akwara. Our charge was to name these parts individually in Igbo. Third, disease causing agents not visible with the naked eyes, such as bacteria and viruses are not known in Igbo language, and needed newly minted words. Perhaps the most difficult challenge we faced is the fact that Igbo language lacks the flexibility of the English language, which borrows its medical terms very liberally from Greek and Latin roots, to create words that did not exist in the language. For instance the word atherosclerosis is derived from the Greek root, athere, meaning gruel or dirt, and skiros, meaning hard. Since Igbo language lacks such close interaction with other languages, English-to-Igbo interpretation of medical terms becomes necessarily descriptive and long. Where we have interpreted a medical term with more than one Igbo word we have tried to preserve the essence of the term. For instance we have named atherosclerosis Atịtị ọwa ọbara, meaning dirt in the blood channel. We have emphasized the concept of chronic disease in contrast with the well understood model of acute illnesses. In this regard we have highlighted hypertension (Obara Mgbanni Elu) stroke (Ọtụọ ọkara), diabetes (Ọrịa shuga), heart attack (Ọkụkụ mkpụrụobi) and heart failure (Okuko afọ mkpụrụobi). This is particularly important because chronic diseases require lifetime treatment, unlike the familiar model of acute diseases, such as malaria (Ịba anwụ nta) or appendicitis (Amahịa mgbakwunye eriri afọ) that requires only brief or intermittent treatment. Since Igbo culture is technologically challenged, we have difficulty coming up with a language that reflects the technology of modern medicine, such as x-ray, ultrasound, centrifuge, CAT scan etc. We have not addressed medical technology in any detail in this issue. In introducing the fundamentals of modern concept of cell biology and genetics in Igbo language we have made it possible for secondary and post secondary school students to understand the structure and functions of the cell organelles the way they never did before. It is a significant departure: from memorization of just words, to explanation of th
Wrapped Soil
Author: Uchenna Nwosu
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
ISBN: 1477173838
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 175
Book Description
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
ISBN: 1477173838
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 175
Book Description
Studies on Indigenous Signed and Spoken Languages in Africa
Author: Emmanuel Asonye
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
ISBN: 1036402258
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 413
Book Description
This volume is an important exploration of Africa’s rich linguistic diversity. The chapters delve into the complexities of linguistic research, preservation, and cultural understanding, with a regional focus covering indigenous African languages. It honours often-overlooked sign languages, making it a trailblazing work in its combination of signed and spoken languages within the African environment. This book is a must-have for anybody interested in African languages, providing new perspectives on language preservation, cultural identity, and the lasting spirit of linguistic diversity. The individual chapters present an invitation to discover, appreciate, and preserve Africa’s indigenous languages. This volume, intended for linguists, policy makers, and graduate and undergraduate students, presents a practical approach to deciphering the complexity of indigenous African languages, both signed and spoken.
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
ISBN: 1036402258
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 413
Book Description
This volume is an important exploration of Africa’s rich linguistic diversity. The chapters delve into the complexities of linguistic research, preservation, and cultural understanding, with a regional focus covering indigenous African languages. It honours often-overlooked sign languages, making it a trailblazing work in its combination of signed and spoken languages within the African environment. This book is a must-have for anybody interested in African languages, providing new perspectives on language preservation, cultural identity, and the lasting spirit of linguistic diversity. The individual chapters present an invitation to discover, appreciate, and preserve Africa’s indigenous languages. This volume, intended for linguists, policy makers, and graduate and undergraduate students, presents a practical approach to deciphering the complexity of indigenous African languages, both signed and spoken.
English/Igbo Translation, Common Medical Terms
Author: Uchenna Nwosu
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781441590268
Category : Diseases
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781441590268
Category : Diseases
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
Specialized Knowledge Mediation
Author: Ekaterina Isaeva
Publisher: Springer Nature
ISBN: 3030951049
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 269
Book Description
This book provides an integrated approach to cognitive-linguistic mediation, with aims toward the efficiency of knowledge transfer and acquisition. Problems are approached through the prism of cognitive modelling, and mapped to such fields as intercultural and interdisciplinary communication, and second language teaching. The novelty lies in the synergies between linguistics, cognitive science, artificial intelligence, culture, and industry. These fields come together through ontological and metaphorical modelling and the attempts to automate such. This text provides a theoretical background for research on mediation, covering cognitive and communicative perspectives, metaphoricity of terms, and the ontologization of human knowledge. It includes detailed descriptions of methods for different types of cognitive modelling and is intended for students and researchers concerned with terminology, cognitive linguistics, applied linguistics, pragmatics, computational linguistics, literature studies, morphology, syntaxis, and semantics.
Publisher: Springer Nature
ISBN: 3030951049
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
Languages : en
Pages : 269
Book Description
This book provides an integrated approach to cognitive-linguistic mediation, with aims toward the efficiency of knowledge transfer and acquisition. Problems are approached through the prism of cognitive modelling, and mapped to such fields as intercultural and interdisciplinary communication, and second language teaching. The novelty lies in the synergies between linguistics, cognitive science, artificial intelligence, culture, and industry. These fields come together through ontological and metaphorical modelling and the attempts to automate such. This text provides a theoretical background for research on mediation, covering cognitive and communicative perspectives, metaphoricity of terms, and the ontologization of human knowledge. It includes detailed descriptions of methods for different types of cognitive modelling and is intended for students and researchers concerned with terminology, cognitive linguistics, applied linguistics, pragmatics, computational linguistics, literature studies, morphology, syntaxis, and semantics.
Igbo-English, English-Igbo Dictionary and Phrasebook
Author: Nicholas Awde
Publisher: Hippocrene Books
ISBN: 9780781806619
Category : Foreign Language Study
Languages : en
Pages : 196
Book Description
Offers five thousand vocabulary entries arranged in thirty-four sections dealing with aspects of daily life.
Publisher: Hippocrene Books
ISBN: 9780781806619
Category : Foreign Language Study
Languages : en
Pages : 196
Book Description
Offers five thousand vocabulary entries arranged in thirty-four sections dealing with aspects of daily life.
Igbo-English Dictionary
Author: Michael J. C. Echeruo
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : English language
Languages : en
Pages : 312
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : English language
Languages : en
Pages : 312
Book Description
Amplifying My Voice
Author: Sophia Ononye, PhD MPH MBA
Publisher: The Sophia Consulting Firm
ISBN:
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 137
Book Description
“Ascertaining the significance of my core purpose elevated my confidence in my life’s work: to enkindle excitement about science, its promise to humanity, and its transformative ability to enhance how well and how long we live.”—Sophia Ononye, PhD MPH MBA, The Sophia Consulting Firm In her first memoir, Amplifying My Voice, Dr. Sophia Ononye shares a reflective and empowering story in three parts, representing critical points in her journey to self-discovery and growth as an immigrant, scientist, entrepreneur, and lifelong leader. Starting with “My African Cradle,” she narrates her humble beginnings in a small Nigerian town, how her innate curiosity and heightened awareness of health disparities spurred her career as a scientist and provides insights from her formal leadership debut as an adolescent in a rural boarding school. In “Becoming An American Woman in Science,” she explores early beginnings in her first adopted home, Ohio, and how a summer experience as a National Science Foundation cancer research intern permanently shaped and influenced her professional advancement. Finally, in “Launch of a Mission-Driven Founder,” she discusses the inspirations behind founding her small business in New York and re-establishing it in California, as well as the financial and emotional rollercoasters of growing and scaling through a streamlined strategy consulting focus on digital transformation, AI, and cell and gene therapies. She also references numerous high-quality publications and perspectives from the influential leaders featured on her consultancy’s Amplifying Scientific Innovation® Video Podcast, a platform she created during COVID-19 to elevate discussions on science advocacy, health equity, and influential leadership. Authentic, intelligent, and motivational, Amplifying My Voice is a personal and professional reckoning of a woman in science and a natural-born leader who continues to overcome setbacks and pitfalls in her mission-driven journey to humanize science across the globe.
Publisher: The Sophia Consulting Firm
ISBN:
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 137
Book Description
“Ascertaining the significance of my core purpose elevated my confidence in my life’s work: to enkindle excitement about science, its promise to humanity, and its transformative ability to enhance how well and how long we live.”—Sophia Ononye, PhD MPH MBA, The Sophia Consulting Firm In her first memoir, Amplifying My Voice, Dr. Sophia Ononye shares a reflective and empowering story in three parts, representing critical points in her journey to self-discovery and growth as an immigrant, scientist, entrepreneur, and lifelong leader. Starting with “My African Cradle,” she narrates her humble beginnings in a small Nigerian town, how her innate curiosity and heightened awareness of health disparities spurred her career as a scientist and provides insights from her formal leadership debut as an adolescent in a rural boarding school. In “Becoming An American Woman in Science,” she explores early beginnings in her first adopted home, Ohio, and how a summer experience as a National Science Foundation cancer research intern permanently shaped and influenced her professional advancement. Finally, in “Launch of a Mission-Driven Founder,” she discusses the inspirations behind founding her small business in New York and re-establishing it in California, as well as the financial and emotional rollercoasters of growing and scaling through a streamlined strategy consulting focus on digital transformation, AI, and cell and gene therapies. She also references numerous high-quality publications and perspectives from the influential leaders featured on her consultancy’s Amplifying Scientific Innovation® Video Podcast, a platform she created during COVID-19 to elevate discussions on science advocacy, health equity, and influential leadership. Authentic, intelligent, and motivational, Amplifying My Voice is a personal and professional reckoning of a woman in science and a natural-born leader who continues to overcome setbacks and pitfalls in her mission-driven journey to humanize science across the globe.
Advanced Igbo Language
Author: Elisha O. Ogbonna
Publisher: Prinoelio Press
ISBN: 1777746140
Category : Foreign Language Study
Languages : en
Pages : 234
Book Description
This straightforward and comprehensive book deals with encamping features of Igbo linguistics in a manner that is new, exciting, and revealing to both speakers and learners. It is a well-organized and systematic material that started from the foundational principles of language study. This excellent book presents Igbo orthography, phonemes: phonemic analysis: phonetic transcription: place of articulation: prefixes: prosody: segmental phoneme: morphemes: class-changing: class-maintaining: word formation, lexeme, synonyms, antonyms, ambiguities and solution to ambiguities in Igbo language. This book should form a useful textbook for high and tertiary institutions: and private establishments where Igbo language is learned and taught.
Publisher: Prinoelio Press
ISBN: 1777746140
Category : Foreign Language Study
Languages : en
Pages : 234
Book Description
This straightforward and comprehensive book deals with encamping features of Igbo linguistics in a manner that is new, exciting, and revealing to both speakers and learners. It is a well-organized and systematic material that started from the foundational principles of language study. This excellent book presents Igbo orthography, phonemes: phonemic analysis: phonetic transcription: place of articulation: prefixes: prosody: segmental phoneme: morphemes: class-changing: class-maintaining: word formation, lexeme, synonyms, antonyms, ambiguities and solution to ambiguities in Igbo language. This book should form a useful textbook for high and tertiary institutions: and private establishments where Igbo language is learned and taught.
Igbo Language
Author: Amadi Okwei
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
ISBN: 9781533660930
Category : Igbo language
Languages : en
Pages : 120
Book Description
This guide to Igbo language collects the most common Igbo phrases and expressions as well as an English-Igbo/Igbo-English dictionary. This phrasebook includes greetings, food items, directions, sightseeing and many other categories of expressions that will help anyone wanting to learn Igbo.
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
ISBN: 9781533660930
Category : Igbo language
Languages : en
Pages : 120
Book Description
This guide to Igbo language collects the most common Igbo phrases and expressions as well as an English-Igbo/Igbo-English dictionary. This phrasebook includes greetings, food items, directions, sightseeing and many other categories of expressions that will help anyone wanting to learn Igbo.