| Look up sewa in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Sewa or SEWA may refer to:
Moro may refer to:
Bo or BO may refer to
Tamba may refer to:
Kim or KIM may refer to:
Mongo may refer to:
A Surah is a chapter of the Qur'an.
Deva may refer to:
Bomi may refer to:
Sierra Leonean Creole or Krio is an English-based creole language that is lingua franca and de facto national language spoken throughout the West African nation of Sierra Leone. Krio is spoken by 87% of Sierra Leone's population and unites the different ethnic groups in the country, especially in their trade and social interaction with each other. Krio is the primary language of communication among Sierra Leoneans at home and abroad. The language is native to the Sierra Leone Creole people, or Krios, a community of about 95,000 descendants of freed slaves from the West Indies, Canada, United States and the British Empire, and is spoken as a second language by millions of other Sierra Leoneans belonging to the country's indigenous tribes. English is Sierra Leone's official language, and Krio, despite its common use throughout the country, has no official status.
Poi or POI may refer to:
Mano may refer to:
Sherbro may refer to:
Manga Sewa was a Yalunka paramount chief in British Sierra Leone who blew up a magazine and much of Falaba, the capital of Solimana, killing himself, his family and other leaders, rather than let it fall to Samori Toure's army.
Krio may refer to:
Koya may refer to:
Kono may refer to:
Baima may refer to:
Yana may refer to:
Sewa River is a river in Sierra Leone. Its furthest sources are the Bagbe River and Bafi River, which originates in the mountainous areas of the northeastern part of the country, near the border with Guinea. From the confluence of Bagbe and Bafi in the Kono District Sewa flows 240-kilometre (150 mi) in a south-southwestern direction and drains an area of 14,141-square-kilometre (5,460 sq mi). Close to the Atlantic coast the river joins Waanje River to form the Kittam River. Kittam River flows 48-kilometre (30 mi) westwards along the coast and enters a network of lagoons and streams separated from the sea by Turner's Peninsula. By the island of Sherbro, Kittam empties into the larger estuary Sherbro River.