Top Must-Know Twi Phrases for Buying and Selling

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The present lesson covers some essential Twi expressions used in a typical buying and selling situation. If you find yourself at the market, a supermarket, a grocery store, or any place of commerce, the Twi phrases given in this lesson will prove useful.

Video Lesson

The lesson is divided into four parts:

  • Part 1: Buying
  • Part 2: Selling
  • Part 3: Pricing
  • Part 4: Payment

Part One: Buying

TWIENGLISH
tÉ”buy VERB
adetÉ”buying NOUN: the act of buying
woretɔ deɛn?what are you buying?
meretɔ …I’m buying …
meretɔ esamI’m buying flour
meretɔ asikyireI’m buying sugar
meretɔ nkyeneI’m buying salt
wopɛ deɛn?what do you want?
mepɛ …I want …
mepÉ› makoI want pepper
mepÉ› gyeeneI want onion
wowÉ” nkosua?do you have eggs?
wowɔ aborɔbɛ?do you have pineapple?
aane, mewÉ” biyes, I have some
aane, yɛwɔ biyes, we have some
aane, ebi wɔ hɔyes, there is/are some available
dabi, menni bino, I don’t have some
dabi, yɛnni bino, we don’t have some
dabi, ebi nni hɔno, there isn’t/aren’t some available

Part Two: Selling

TWIENGLISH
tÉ”nsell VERB
adetÉ”nselling NOUN: the act of selling
metɔn ntomaI sell clothes
metɔn nkonnwaI sell chairs
metɔn kyiniiɛI sell umbrella(s)
wotɔn mpaboa?do you sell shoes (footwear)?
wotɔn kwadu?do you sell bananas?
tɔ na tɔnbuy and sell

Part Three: Pricing

TWIENGLISH
É›boÉ”; boÉ”price NOUN
bɔ boɔto name a price
atufoɔ boɔretailers’ price (cheap price)
ɛyɛ sɛn?how much (is it)?
ne boɔ yɛ sɛn?how much (is its price)?
mpaboa no boɔ yɛ sɛn?how much is the price of the shoes?
ne boɔ yɛ denit’s expensive
ne boɔ yɛ den pa arait’s very expensive
ne boɔ yɛ den dodoit’s too expensive
te soreduce it (the price)
te boÉ” no soreduce the price
ne boɔ yɛ den. mepa wo kyɛw te soit’s expensive. please reduce it (the price)
focheap
ɛyɛ foit’s cheap
ɛyɛ fo o!it’s super cheap!
aduane no yÉ› fo o!the food is super cheap!

Part Four: Paying

TWIENGLISH
tuapay VERB
tua kato pay for it (pay what’s owed)
tua ma mepay for me
mɛtuaI will pay
mentuaI won’t pay
mentumi ntuaI cannot pay
mɛtumi abɛtua (ɔ)kyena?can I come and pay tomorrow?
firito take/give on credit
fa firi megive it to me on credit

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Picture of Tikya Yaw
STEPHEN AWIBA, known by his students as YAW, is the founding editor of LEARNAKAN.COM and LEARNAKANDICTIONARY.COM. He was born and raised in Kumasi, the Ashanti regional capital of Ghana, where Akan (Asante Twi) is spoken as the first language. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Linguistics and Theatre Arts from the University of Ghana and an MPhil in English Linguistics and Language Acquisition from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).

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