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Image of “These Girls’ Fashion is Sick!”: An African City and the Geography of Sartorial Worldliness

Race, Culture, and Identity

“These Girls’ Fashion is Sick!”: An African City and the Geography of Sartorial Worldliness

Ogunyankin, Grace Adeniyi - Personal Name;
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  • “These Girls’ Fashion is Sick!”: An African City and the Geography of Sartorial Worldliness

As an urban feminist geographer with a research interest in African cities, I was initially pleased when the web series, An African City, debuted in 2014. The series was released on YouTube and also available online at www. anafricancity.tv. Within the first few weeks of its release, An African City had over one million views. Created by Nicole Amarteifio, a Ghanaian who grew up in London and the United States, An African City is offered as the African answer to Sex and the City, and as a counter-narrative to popular depictions of African women as poor, unfashionable, unsuccessful and uneducated. ktab qamws lm alajtma mhmd atf ghyth


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: ., 2015
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Language
English
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Subject(s)
Sex
African City
Ghanaian Women
City
Counter-narrative
Web Series
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Article
Part Of Series
Feminist Africa;21
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Ktab Qamws Lm Alajtma Mhmd Atf Ghyth

First, "ktab" could be a mix of Arabic and another language. In Arabic, "كتاب" means "book". "qamws" might be "قاموس" which is "dictionary". Then "lm alajtma" – "الاجتma" could be "الاجتماع" (meeting) or "الجمعية" (association). "mhmd" might be "محمد" (Muhammad) or "محادثة" (conversation). "atf" could be "ألف" (thousand) or "أطف" (children). "ghyth" is unclear, maybe "جيث" meaning "place"?

I should ask for clarification. Maybe provide options based on possible interpretations. For example, if they're referring to a dictionary term related to meetings, a book about Muhammad's family, or a specific historical event. Alternatively, suggest common Arabic terms they might be trying to look up. Let me put together possible responses and ask for confirmation on what exactly they need.

Alternatively, it could be a mix of Arabic transliteration and other words. Let me check each part again. Another possibility is that the user is referring to a specific book or resource in Arabic, maybe a dictionary about Muhammad's family or children in a meeting context. Without more context, it's challenging. The user might be looking for a specific term, a dictionary entry, or a reference to a historical meeting.

Wait, another angle: Could it be a cipher where each word is shifted? For example, substituting letters. Let's test that. If "ktab" is "kitab" (book), shift letters. But that might not be relevant. Alternatively, maybe it's a phonetic spelling of Arabic words using Latin letters. For example, "ktab" as "kitab", "qamws" as "qamūs". Then "alajtma mhmd atf gyth" – possibly "al-ijtima Muhammad al-atf jathiy" (the meeting Muhammad children verses). But I'm not sure.

Putting it together: Book, dictionary, the meeting? of Muhammad, children, place? Doesn't make much sense. Maybe it's a cipher or transliteration. Let me check common transliterations. "ktab" could be "kitab" which is Arabic for book. "Qamws" as القاموس. "Alajtma" might be "al-ijtima" (the meeting). "Mhmd" for Muhammad. "Atf" could be "al-af" (the thousand) or "al-atif" (the children). "Ghyth" might be a typo for "jathiya" (verses) or another word.

Alternatively, maybe it's a mix of words split incorrectly. Let me try re-separating: "ktab qamws" as book dictionary. Then "lam" (لهم) which is "for them", then "alajtma" (the meeting), "mhmd atf" (Muhammad children), "ghyth" (place). Maybe it's a reference to a book or a meeting about Muhammad's family? Or perhaps it's a search query for a book in Arabic, like a dictionary related to meetings or Muhammad's children.

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First, "ktab" could be a mix of Arabic and another language. In Arabic, "كتاب" means "book". "qamws" might be "قاموس" which is "dictionary". Then "lm alajtma" – "الاجتma" could be "الاجتماع" (meeting) or "الجمعية" (association). "mhmd" might be "محمد" (Muhammad) or "محادثة" (conversation). "atf" could be "ألف" (thousand) or "أطف" (children). "ghyth" is unclear, maybe "جيث" meaning "place"?

I should ask for clarification. Maybe provide options based on possible interpretations. For example, if they're referring to a dictionary term related to meetings, a book about Muhammad's family, or a specific historical event. Alternatively, suggest common Arabic terms they might be trying to look up. Let me put together possible responses and ask for confirmation on what exactly they need.

Alternatively, it could be a mix of Arabic transliteration and other words. Let me check each part again. Another possibility is that the user is referring to a specific book or resource in Arabic, maybe a dictionary about Muhammad's family or children in a meeting context. Without more context, it's challenging. The user might be looking for a specific term, a dictionary entry, or a reference to a historical meeting.

Wait, another angle: Could it be a cipher where each word is shifted? For example, substituting letters. Let's test that. If "ktab" is "kitab" (book), shift letters. But that might not be relevant. Alternatively, maybe it's a phonetic spelling of Arabic words using Latin letters. For example, "ktab" as "kitab", "qamws" as "qamūs". Then "alajtma mhmd atf gyth" – possibly "al-ijtima Muhammad al-atf jathiy" (the meeting Muhammad children verses). But I'm not sure.

Putting it together: Book, dictionary, the meeting? of Muhammad, children, place? Doesn't make much sense. Maybe it's a cipher or transliteration. Let me check common transliterations. "ktab" could be "kitab" which is Arabic for book. "Qamws" as القاموس. "Alajtma" might be "al-ijtima" (the meeting). "Mhmd" for Muhammad. "Atf" could be "al-af" (the thousand) or "al-atif" (the children). "Ghyth" might be a typo for "jathiya" (verses) or another word.

Alternatively, maybe it's a mix of words split incorrectly. Let me try re-separating: "ktab qamws" as book dictionary. Then "lam" (لهم) which is "for them", then "alajtma" (the meeting), "mhmd atf" (Muhammad children), "ghyth" (place). Maybe it's a reference to a book or a meeting about Muhammad's family? Or perhaps it's a search query for a book in Arabic, like a dictionary related to meetings or Muhammad's children.