Igbo (Nigeria)
About
Igbo is tonal, rhythmic, fast. Lagos Igbo is clipped, countryside Igbo stretches syllables. I once said “Kedu, enyi m?” to a neighbor and he laughed, replying with an idiom I didn’t understand, and then a story about his uncle’s cow that wandered into a yam field. Slang is casual, English pops in randomly. Mispronounce a tone? You’ll be teased lightly, exaggeratedly, and corrected in a story that loops back to the greeting you tried to say.
Conversations spiral: greeting → gossip → family → food → joke → proverb → exaggeration → song lyric → market gossip. You’ll leave exhausted but with far more memorized than any textbook could offer.
About Enuncia Global
Enuncia Global is… well, I guess the simplest way to put it is we’re in the business of languages. Not just translation in the boring dictionary sense, but kind of making communication smoother between people who otherwise would stare blankly at each other. We do translations, voice overs, subtitles, all that. Sometimes it feels like we’re everywhere—legal docs one day, video game dialogues the next, and then suddenly some corporate brochure that has to sound “professional but not robotic.”
I think what makes Enuncia Global different (and I don’t want to sound like a cliché company profile here, but still) is that it’s not only about throwing words from one language to another. We actually care about tone, style, culture… because honestly, what’s the point of translating if you lose the feel of it? Like, imagine a joke translated literally—it just dies, right? We try to keep that soul alive.
We’ve got a team that’s oddly diverse. Some are language nerds, some are techies who enjoy making websites and SEO stuff work, and then there are project managers who somehow manage to keep everyone from losing their minds. Not easy.
At the end of the day, it’s about trust. Clients give us sensitive stuff—sometimes personal, sometimes business secrets—and we deliver, quietly, without fuss. Maybe that’s why people stick with us. Anyway, that’s Enuncia Global in short.
