Egyptians singing in Somali without realising it

وحا وي يا وحا وي اياحا Waxa weeye Dayaxa"Ayaxa"

Egyptians have been signing this song since they converted to Islam 1400 years ago. Today they speak Arabic and have no recollection of their ancestors language which they call "Coptic". Even the so called Copts today speak their language at their churchs without pronouncing the X ح and C ع sounds. They just mimic the pronunciations of the westerners who brought their ancestors language back to life. This song is the only thing that they have left from their ancestors language.

Note: 74.5% of upper Egyptians and 85% of Somalis belong to haplogroup E-V12 (10k year old) and 10% of Somalis and 7% of upper Egyptians belong to haplogroup.
Both haplogroups have been found among ancient and modern Egyptians along with Somali mtdna R0, N1a and M in addition to haplogroup L which made us black.


WE WUZ ANCIENT EGYPTIAN.
:rejoice:
 
وحا وي يا وحا وي اياحا Waxa weeye Dayaxa"Ayaxa"

Egyptians have been signing this song since they converted to Islam 1400 years ago. Today they speak Arabic and have no recollection of their ancestors language which they call "Coptic". Even the so called Copts today speak their language at their churchs without pronouncing the X ح and C ع sounds. They just mimic the pronunciations of the westerners who brought their ancestors language back to life. This song is the only thing that they have left from their ancestors language.

Note: 74.5% of upper Egyptians and 85% of Somalis belong to haplogroup E-V12 (10k year old) and 10% of Somalis and 7% of upper Egyptians belong to haplogroup.
Both haplogroups have been found among ancient and modern Egyptians along with Somali mtdna R0, N1a and M in addition to haplogroup L which made us black.


WE WUZ ANCIENT EGYPTIAN.
:rejoice:
There is a new theory that there is a Cushitic substrata within the ancient Egyptian language, apparently the ancient Egyptians absorbed a lot of cushites early on, I think especially the east Cushitic branch which Somali is a part of so this actually makes a lot of sense. There is a list of words with the same sound/meaning among both languages. They will eventually realize and prove we wuz fircoon.
 
@New World Is this obsession too? She is literally chanting ‘here comes the (new) moon’. It’s eerily obvious to all Somali speakers. The Egyptians have no idea where it comes from and are just now learning its meaning. More evidence of the east Cushitic substrata!
 
Maybe that anicent ice age civilization in the sahara desert from 11,000 years ago that you hear people like gram Hancock talk about and plato mentions were actually somali.

We wuz Atlanteans.
 

Aurelian

Forza Somalia!
VIP
وحا وي يا وحا وي اياحا Waxa weeye Dayaxa"Ayaxa"

Egyptians have been signing this song since they converted to Islam 1400 years ago. Today they speak Arabic and have no recollection of their ancestors language which they call "Coptic". Even the so called Copts today speak their language at their churchs without pronouncing the X ح and C ع sounds. They just mimic the pronunciations of the westerners who brought their ancestors language back to life. This song is the only thing that they have left from their ancestors language.

Note: 74.5% of upper Egyptians and 85% of Somalis belong to haplogroup E-V12 (10k year old) and 10% of Somalis and 7% of upper Egyptians belong to haplogroup.
Both haplogroups have been found among ancient and modern Egyptians along with Somali mtdna R0, N1a and M in addition to haplogroup L which made us black.


WE WUZ ANCIENT EGYPTIAN.
:rejoice:
Appearntly the word وحوي "waxey" means welcome in AE and إياحه "iyaxah" means moon. So essentially it means welcome the moon. Also Ahhotep I "Iyax-Xotep" was an Egyptian queen in 1560–1530 BCE. Iyax also mean Moon.
 
I listened to this Egyptian song years ago when I was young, but since my interest in the ancient Egyptian language was kindled, I just realized that this ancient Egyptian song is related to our Somali language.
for example :
How do you say "respect" in Somali?

You will be amazed at the linguistic depth of that word that we now use in the Somali language in a completely different way, which has unfortunately lost its depth.
 
We can use the Ancient Egyptian Language Dictionary to discover the hidden and lost meanings of our Somali words and to enrich the Somali language (since we are a pastoral people whose language has only recently been written down).

for example :
How do you say "respect" in Somali?
Exactly what I was thinking a few days ago. Something similar was done for Hebrew using the Quran since they are both Semitic languages.
 

Shimbiris

بىَر غىَل إيؤ عآنؤ لؤ
VIP
@Shimbiris How good is your Somali sxb?
Messejkan waxan uu qoroya lamagoodlihi oo CabdiGaalDoon uu turjuma. Hadalkayge dhageyso, saaxiib. Ninkan waa nin gaal oo rabo ino ilmoheen Kristiyaanimo baro. Dalka Soomaaliya oo dhan ino Masiixi ka dhigo bo raba, walaal. Waxas ma uu turjumikarta ado nin shahaadada makhlay marko dhashtay? Ado maryoole oo awoowoyashiis Xabasho la dagalijireen ah? Side uu seexankarta ado nin gaal dadkagi ku fasaxay? Is qabo, niyahow, iyo gaalkan baas iska fuji.

Nova Scotian Madow kulaha. Nacalaa tulaahi calayk.
 

Shimbiris

بىَر غىَل إيؤ عآنؤ لؤ
VIP
@Shimbiris I thought you were dishiishe sxb, this is not dishiishe lahjad :farmajoyaab:

Mamo Shimbiris waa nag reer Baydhabo oo Xamar caday ku soo qortay, sxb. Mostly adopted her dialect and was closer to her growing up. Aabo was often away on business trips with his reer Sanaag-Bari jabber. You thought I'd be some aaaaboooowe nigga, huh?

:silanyolaugh:
 
Mamo Shimbiris waa nag reer Baydhabo oo Xamar caday ku soo qortay, sxb. Mostly adopted her dialect and was closer to her growing up. Aabo was often away on business trips with his reer Sanaag-Bari jabber. You thought I'd be some aaaaboooowe nigga, huh?

:silanyolaugh:
I expected you to sound like a nigga that never left Bari :farmajoyaab:
 

Trending

Latest posts

Top