Okada, Mama Put, K-leg, others added to Oxford Dictionary.

Some popular Nigerian ‘English’ words have made it into the Oxford English Dictionary for the first time. These words are typically those which Nigerians have coined from Nigerian languages since the 1970s and 1980s.

They include: Buka: a word borrowed from Hausa and Yoruba which refers to a roadside restaurant sells local food at low prices.

Danfo: The most popular means of transportation in Lagos and other Nigerian cities. Danfo is derived from Yoruba. It was first used in 1973, and described those yellow minibuses which convey paying passengers through the ever buzzing Lagos road.

Okada: This is used to refer to a motorcycle that also convey paying passengers. It is a reference to Okada Air, an airline that operated in Nigeria from 1983 to 1997, and its reputation as a fast yet potentially dangerous form of transport, just like the motorcycle taxi.

Mama put: this was derived from the way that customers usually order food in a buka: they say ‘Mama, put…’ to the food vendor.

Chop: This is a pidgin word which means to eat.

K-leg: Also originating in the 19th century is K-leg, first attested in 1842 in British English, but now used mostly in Nigerian English. It is another term for the condition of knock knees, as well as a depreciative name for a person affected with this condition, whose inward-turning knees often resemble the shape of the letter K.

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