Sodiq Suleiman (PRINCEWORTHY)

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Sodiq Suleiman (PRINCEWORTHY)

Sodiq Suleiman (PRINCEWORTHY)

@SodiqAweda2

Economics/Finance/Data Analytics/Textrovert/ Phone engineer/Humors/Sarcasm

Lagos, Nigeria 가입일 Ocak 2022
694 팔로잉245 팔로워
고정된 트윗
Sodiq Suleiman (PRINCEWORTHY)
Sodiq Suleiman (PRINCEWORTHY)@SodiqAweda2·
Alrightyyy, It is finally here! This highly interactive dashboard is meant to communicate kPIs of a global sales dataset. For easy comprehension, I added captions where necessary. It houses Time series, Product and Customer analysis. #datafam
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Sgt Show
Sgt Show@SgtShow01·
Arsenal fans, I know we are sad. Can ₦10k make you feel a bit better? Say hi, let's give some people 10k each. It's painful, I know. But Elon paid.
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EKANEM 📊💹📉
EKANEM 📊💹📉@ekanemjr_99·
Reintroducing myself 👋 I’m Ekanem Emmanuel — a Data Analyst who uses data to solve real-world problems and drive better decisions. I’m here to connect with clients who need data-driven solutions and also network with fellow tech professionals. Let’s connect 🤝
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folowosele adeboye
folowosele adeboye@boye4christ2006·
Congratulations congratulations congratulation Someone in my free scholarship WhatsApp mentorship just got a fully funded Erasmus scholarship this week, she’s travelling abroad this year without spending a penny. Don’t block your chances of going abroad just because you don’t have money. I have a WhatsApp scholarship mentorship group, and it’s completely free. Because of this, I’ll be opening the door for a few people today. If you’re interested in joining my WhatsApp scholarship mentorship group, comment “I’m interested” below. Let me know those who are interested!
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BSAT Properties
BSAT Properties@BSAT_Properties·
I just randomly remembered my friend Awwal today. We both attended LASU together Back in 300 level, one of our semester exams fell during Ramadan The night before one of the papers, we decided to do night reading in his hostel. After Sahoor, we told ourselves, “Let’s just take a quick nap before heading to school” Omo… na so we sleep forget. The exam was by 11:00 a.m., and normally you’re expected to be in the exam hall at least 30 minutes before the start. I was the first to wake up. 10:47 a.m My heart nearly jumped out of my chest I quickly woke Awwal up and we rushed out. By the time we got to the exam hall, it was already 11:15 a.m The invigilators didn’t even listen to any story. They said the rule is the rule: we should come back and write the course the following session since we were “not serious with our lives.” Nothing we didn’t do... begging, explaining, pleading, E no work. We stepped aside and stood somewhere close to the hall, hoping maybe one of them would pity us and call us back inside. Still nothing. Then I remembered the story of the men trapped in the cave (Ashabul Kahf type of lesson we learned about calling upon Allah through good deeds). So I told Awwal: “Guy, maybe we should try something like that. Let’s remind Allah of one sincere good deed we’ve done purely because we fear Him. Maybe He will consider us.” I went first. I said something like: “Ya Allah, please consider the fact that even with my very extroverted lifestyle, I have never consciously smoked or drunk alcohol purely out of fear of You.” Before I could even finish, Awwal looked at me and said: “You be fool.” He said smoking is not even clearly haram, and that alcohol in small quantities is even present in some drugs and food preservatives. I just told him, “That’s why I said consciously, olodo.” Now it was his turn. Awwal cleared his throat and said: “Ya Allah, please consider the day soldiers slapped me twice at the LASU gate while I was doing task force duty… and I didn’t slap them back because I feared You.” Bro,I didn’t even know when I burst out laughing. Me that was supposed to be crying because they refused to let me write my exam. But that his confession just finished me. Because how now? Soldiers slapped you twice at LASU gate and you didn’t return the slap… and you’re calling that fear of Allah? My brother, that one is not fear of Allah. That one is fear of soldiers. If he had returned the slap, those soldiers would have beaten the living daylight out of him right there at LASU-Igando gate. Na survival instinct be that, not piety. Anyway, while we were still outside, the lecturer in charge of the course happened to pass by. We ran to him and explained everything The funny part? He was a Christian But he understood immediately. He even said Sahoor sleep can be like that sometimes, especially if you studied overnight Just like that, he allowed us to go in and sit for the exam. Meanwhile, the invigilators who sent us out earlier were Muslims That day taught me something important: It’s not always about who shares your religion. Sometimes help comes through whoever God decides to use And to be fair to those invigilators, they were simply doing their job. The instruction was clear: late students don’t enter the hall We were the ones who overslept We were the ones who broke the rule Expecting them to bend the rule just because we share the same religion would have been unfair Many people go through life expecting special treatment from others simply because of shared religion, tribe, or background Life doesn’t work that way Also, some of us think we are stacking up “good deeds” in very funny ways, expecting heaven to be impressed. Just dey play. The day you realize these two things: 1. God can send help through anyone, not just people who look like you or worship like you 2. Many people you think have wronged you were simply doing their job or following instructions © Yushab Abolore Ayomide
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Kelani🎀
Kelani🎀@phreedaos7076·
Follow me guyss 😚 I'm funny sometimes 🤭😂
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Kelani🎀
Kelani🎀@phreedaos7076·
Why is “Number” abbreviated to “No.” there is not a single “O” in the word Stole this tweet btw😭😭 First time stealing a tweet, kinda nervous😂💔
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The Touchline | 𝐓
The Touchline | 𝐓@TouchlineX·
📸 - 16 YEAR OLD MAX DOWMAN HAS COME ON TO SAVE ARSENAL! BRING OUT THE PENCILS, THE SCRIPT IS ABOUT TO BE WRITTEN!
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Jainam Parmar
Jainam Parmar@aiwithjainam·
The people who will benefit the most from AI over the next few years are not necessarily engineers or developers, but the people who learn how to think with LLMs and use them as assistants for research, writing, and decision making. I created a starter playbook for mastering ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. Comment "AI" and I’ll DM it to you.
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Sodiq Suleiman (PRINCEWORTHY)
Sodiq Suleiman (PRINCEWORTHY)@SodiqAweda2·
Alrightyyy, It is finally here! This highly interactive dashboard is meant to communicate kPIs of a global sales dataset. For easy comprehension, I added captions where necessary. It houses Time series, Product and Customer analysis. #datafam
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A.Y.O
A.Y.O@YusufAsunmogejo·
Dear Apostle Emmanuel Iren, @pst_iren My lovely Muslim brothers have tagged me to the claims you made in the quoted video while addressing interfaith marriage. I completely respect your right as a pastor to set boundaries for your congregation and guide them on whom to marry. However, the theological framing and the direct accusations you leveled against the Islamic faith are not just inaccurate; they are deeply dangerous. I am writing this intellectual rebuttal so that unsuspecting people—both Christians and Muslims—are not cajoled by this profound misrepresentation of the Islamic doctrine. First, let’s talk about your biblical justification. You used the scripture about being "unequally yoked with unbelievers" and literally asked how the temple of God could have an association with "Baal" while referring to a Muslim partner. Every religion has its own internal rules for marriage, and we respect yours. But comparing Islam—a strictly monotheistic Abrahamic faith that actively reveres Jesus (Isa) and all the Prophets—to the pagan idol Baal is intellectually dishonest. In Islamic theology, we do not view Christians as idolaters; we classify you as Ahl al-Kitab (People of the Book). You can easily advise your flock not to marry outside the church without equating the worship of the God of Abraham to ancient, literal paganism. The absolute most dangerous part of your sermon was your confident yet ignorant explanation of "Taqiyyah". You sat in your seat and told your congregation that Islamic doctrine permits Muslims to actively deceive people if they think that deception will propagate the cause of Islam. Let me be categorically clear: this is a complete fabrication of standard Islamic practice. And to be fair to your ignorance, I understand where you might have picked up this fragmented idea. However, you are confusing mainstream Islam with a sectarian practice. You are referring to a concept that was historically developed in Shi'a theology. Because Shi'a groups were a political minority centuries ago, their scholars developed a broader version of Taqiyyah to hide their beliefs and survive. However, since I don't want to leave any stone unturned, I must state firmly that mainstream Orthodox (Sunni) Islam, which makes up about 90% of the Muslim world, completely dissociates from this. We do not accept the Shi'a expansion of Taqiyyah. In fact, because of fundamental deviations like this that require elevating deception to a religious tool, many strict orthodox Islamic scholars do not even classify those specific Shi'a sects as being within the fold of Islam at all. In authentic, mainstream Islam, Taqiyyah is a very strict, incredibly narrow concession. It allows a believer to verbally conceal their faith ONLY when they are facing imminent torture or a direct, literal threat of murder. That is it. It is about preserving life under brutal persecution. It is absolutely not a free pass to trick a Christian woman into a marriage contract. Foundational Islamic law strictly forbids deception, betrayal, and the breaking of covenants. The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) explicitly said, "Whoever cheats us is not one of us." Also, Islamic law (Shari'ah) explicitly permits a Muslim man to marry a Christian woman (Ahl al-Kitab), but it fiercely protects her right to practice her own faith. A Muslim husband is canonically forbidden from forcing his Christian wife to convert or stopping her from attending her church. Our theology is crystal clear on this boundary. The Quran explicitly declares in Surah Al-Baqarah (2:256): "Let there be no compulsion in religion, for the truth stands out clearly from falsehood." The man in your Abuja story who deceitfully trapped that woman and then banned her from church wasn't practicing Islamic doctrine; he was directly violating it.
Viral Gospel@viralgospelhq

I have a muslim boyfriend, should I marry him or break up with him?

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Jameswilliams Chiahukamnanya Gabriel
Jameswilliams Chiahukamnanya Gabriel@kamanya_thinks·
1. Develop a taste for words, particularly exact words that define exact feelings and thoughts. You can do this by first developing the appetite to express your thoughts exactly as they are. Each time you use inexact words, you betray your thoughts. Students often lose marks on this account. 2. Look for words in uncommon places, not common spaces like your average entertainment blogs, where language has to be plain enough for everyone. There is often a loss of expressive quality that comes with mass production. 3. i. Be comfortable with uncommon spaces and actions, such as reading a Guardian article on a topic you are passionate about rather than banal gists by the roadside, listening to an Intelligence Squared or Oxford Union debate, or an interview between bestselling authors who are renowned thought leaders in the field under discussion. Listen to incredibly eloquent speakers like Stephen Fry, MP Shashi Tharoor, or even Jordan Peterson on some days, speaking on topics they are truly adept and passionate about and ones you are interested in. You will often come across registers that make you think, “I have always thought about that, but I have never expressed it using that word.” Yes, whatever topic you are interested in, seek out the most qualified and most eloquent voices who express themselves with the same passion. You will come across many gems. ii. Another uncommon space is well-written movies or series like The Blacklist. If you pause to check the meaning of the words used by Raymond Reddington and infuse them into your vocabulary, you will be miles ahead verbally. 4. Embrace intentionality and patience in your acquisition of words, no matter the context. Most of us prioritize our entertainment over our education, and that is why we can easily neglect words for actions. Meanwhile, it is often the words that give actions their exact feel. If you hear a word that sounds interesting to you or that arrests you, take note of it or search for its meaning. That is how words like perspicacity, paradigmatic, and inveigle entered my lexicon this year. Do not let entertainment get in the way of education. 5. Prioritizing your acquisition of words will be easy if you think of yourself as a wielder of words rather than just a consumer. See words as assets and gems to be identified, purchased, and kept for your next outing in speech or writing. Collect words to use them. There is a future that will need you to know the nuanced distinctions between two synonymic words, for example, paradigmatic and emblematic, nuanced and complex, tiny and little. Once you are in that mode, when these distinctions matter, you will find your hunt for words thoroughly fascinating. Hone your words. Master the art of wielding them. In time, you will come to understand that they are the most powerful things about you. X: @kamanya_thinks Facebook: Jameswilliams Kamnanya Gabriel
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A.Y.O
A.Y.O@YusufAsunmogejo·
First, I want to believe you mean your sajadah (prayer mat) and not sutrah. To answer your question, yes, it absolutely counts. In Islam, there is something called Lisan al-Hal, which is the language of your condition. Sometimes the heaviest prayers have no words at all. When your mind is too crowded to speak, your broken state itself is making the Du'a. Allah says in the Quran that He responds to the distressed. He does not need your perfect vocabulary to understand your pain; the very fact that you brought your heavy heart and sat on your mat seeking Him is a complete and beautiful prayer. May Allah wipe your tears.
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Tobi
Tobi@_Tobolos_·
I could argue this is the biggest the gulf in class between Arsenal and Spurs has ever been in my lifetime Home and Away thrashings, 5 Ws in a row, 7 wins in the last 8, 21-8 aggregate score Titi and co weren’t mopping the floor with them like this I need that relegation 🙏🏽
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Uchay
Uchay@anicheuche·
@Arsenal_rep1 Abeg Arsenal fans let’s celebrate this win,following back ASAP
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Arsenal Rep
Arsenal Rep@Arsenal_rep1·
Submit your handles let's follow you ❤️🤍 Tonight is sweet, follow everyone.....
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Gooner Chris
Gooner Chris@ArsenalN7·
🔴⚪️ Calling all Arsenal fans who never stop BELIEVING. Drop your handles, let’s connect ❤️
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Oluwakayode🇨🇦
Oluwakayode🇨🇦@Khaytweets·
No Arsenal fan should be under 1K. Say hi 👋 let’s connect! Celebrating the derby win together in style.
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Arsenal Rep
Arsenal Rep@Arsenal_rep1·
Tottenham 1-3 Arsenal Arsenal 4-2 Chelsea Brighton 0-2 Arsenal Arsenal 3-0 Everton Arsenal 3-1 Bournemouth Man City 0-0 Arsenal Arsenal 2-1 Newcastle Arsenal 1-0 Fulham West Ham 1-2 Arsenal Arsenal 5-0 Burnley Crystal Palace 1-3 Arsenal I am from the future, get ready for parade Arsenal fans....
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