Saad A̱buba̱ka̱t
ofisa a̱khwot a̱kwop Naijeriya ma̱ng Suli̱tan Sokoto
Muwama̱du Saad A̱buba̱ka̱t (Muhammadu Sa'ad Abubakar; La̱ra̱ba: محمد سعد أبو بكر), CFR (byin 24 Zwat A̱ni̱nai 1956) wa yet Suli̱tan 20 Sokoto wu. Nang Suli̱tan Sokoto, á̱ kyiak nggu nang a̱kwak a̱son Khwikpaa̱pyia̱ á̱niet fam a̱za-Naijeriya wu, fam hu nang á̱niet shi a̱swak ma̱ a̱byin ka a̱ni.[1]
Saad A̱buba̱ka̱t
Sot mbyin | a̱sam |
---|---|
A̱byin mbyin | Naijeriya |
A̱lyoot nang á̱ ku tyia̱ nggu | Mohammed |
A̱lyoot kyangbwak | Abubakar |
A̱lyoot tyok | sultan |
A̱tuk mbyin | 24 Zwat A̱ni̱nai 1956 |
A̱keang mbyin | Sokoto |
A̱tyia̱ | Siddiq Abubakar III |
A̱lyem mbyin | Kpat |
Lilyem a̱ lyen lyiat, lyuut ku tyia̱ bwak ma̱ng a̱nhu a̱ni | Shong, Kpat, Nigerian Pidgin |
Ta̱m | military personnel |
Cuk ji a̱ ku ba̱ng a̱ni | Sultan of Sokoto |
A̱ ku nat fang hu ma̱ | Barewa College, Nigerian Defence Academy |
Nwap | A̱fa̱ta |
Khwi ku nwuan-ta̱cya̱ | Khwikpaa̱pyia̱ |
Military or police rank | general |
A̱buba̱ka̱t wa yet a̱ci̱t cuk tyok wu nang a̱tyia̱-a̱khwop gbangbang nggu wu, Shehu Usman Dan Fodio (1754–1817), a̱kwak a̱son A̱lifang Maliki Khwikpaa̱pyia̱ wu ma̱ng sa Sufi ji nang á̱ ngyei Ka̱di̱ri a̱ni, ku kpaat ndyia̱ cyi sweang na̱ ku swak a̱ni.[1]
Ya̱fang
jhyuk- ↑ 1.0 1.1 CFR, mni--sultan-sokoto The Muslim 500: "Amirul Mu'minin Sheikh as Sultan Muhammadu Sa’adu Abubakar" Archived 2014-06-25 at the Wayback Machine retrieved Zwat Tswuon 15, 2014
A̱ka̱fwuop nta
jhyuk- Profile: Muhammed Sa'adu Abubakar BBC News, A̱tuk Lamit, Zwat Swak ma̱ng Jhyiung 2, 2006, 10:30 GMT (di̱n Shong)