- mot
Toubab » in
Annuaire et mémoires du comité d'études
historiques et
scientifiques de l'A.O.F., 1917, p. 205-216 Anne Doquet, « Tous les
toubabs ne se...
-
Toubab Dialo (or
Toubab Dialaw) is a
village in Senegal,
located on the
Petite Côte,
south of Dakar,
between Bargny,
Senegal and Popenguine. It is part...
-
criminals and
their ****ociates. In the Gambia,
white people are
called toubabs,
which may
derive from the
colonial practice of
paying locals two shillings...
- Kuyateh, Ballaké Sissoko, Sona Jobarteh,
Foday Musa Suso,
Seckou Keita,
Toubab Krewe,
Jacques Burtin,
Alhaji Bai
Konte and sons
Dembo and Sherrifo, Mory...
-
entire coast is part of the city of M'Bour, with
fishing villages, such as
Toubab Dialaw, Joal-Fadiout,
Palmarin and Djiffer.
During the late
fifteenth and...
-
Wikiquote has
quotations related to
James McBride (writer). Curry, Ginette. "
Toubab La!":
Literary Representations of Mixed-race
Characters in the
African Diaspora...
- People", Los
Angeles Review of Books,
August 1, 2017. Curry, Ginette, "
Toubab La!:
Literary Representations of Mixed-race
Characters in the
African Diaspora"...
- The
Pulitzer Prizes. 5 May 2024.
Retrieved 6 May 2024. Curry, Ginette.
Toubab La!:
Literary Representations of Mixed-race
Characters in the
African Diaspora...
-
Rebecca Walker. "Becoming the
Third Wave" by
Rebecca Walker Curry, Ginette. "
Toubab La!":
Literary Representations of Mixed-race
Characters in the
African Diaspora...
- (Arabic
loanword used by some
Muslims literally meaning "Christian"), "
toubab" (Mande languages),
among other terms. "Oborɔnyi" is not a
direct translation...