Lovemore Mahachi

1.4K posts

Lovemore Mahachi

Lovemore Mahachi

@mahachil

Interests: Oral Health, Data Science

Katılım Eylül 2013
874 Takip Edilen524 Takipçiler
Lovemore Mahachi
Lovemore Mahachi@mahachil·
@begottensun All teams disappoint at times. Remember all the teams behind Arsenal on the log are currently disappointing
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K@begottensun·
Can I just let everyone know that my biggest disappointments and mistake are not Trump or CCC. My biggest is my life long supporting Arsenal. Arsenal has caused me far more BP health issues and disappointment. I love you Arsenal. But you always disappoint me.
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Infostrix
Infostrix@Unleashyoubro·
Africa's Most Valuable Brands 💰 1. MTN Group 🇿🇦 — $3.5B 2.Vodacom 🇿🇦 — $2.3B 3.Standard Bank 🇿🇦 — $1.6B 4.First National Bank 🇿🇦 — $1.5B 5.Absa Group 🇿🇦 — $1.3B 6.Nedbank 🇿🇦 — $1.2B 7. Capitec Bank 🇿🇦 — $1.1B 8.Shoprite 🇿🇦 — $1.0B 9.Pick n Pay 🇿🇦 — $0.95B 10.Sasol 🇿🇦 — $0.90B 11.Eskom 🇿🇦 — $0.85B 12.Anglo American 🇬🇧/🇿🇦 $0.80B 13.Old Mutual 🇿🇦 — $0.75B 14.Discovery Limited 🇿🇦 $0.70B 15.Bidcorp 🇿🇦 — $0.65B 16.Woolworths Holdings🇿🇦$0.60B 17.Massmart 🇿🇦 — $0.55B 18.MultiChoice Group 🇿🇦 $0.50B 19.Safaricom 🇰🇪 — $0.45B 20.Dangote Group 🇳🇬 — $0.40B
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Lovemore Mahachi
Lovemore Mahachi@mahachil·
@begottensun What is the cost of carbohydrate equivalent to a plate of sadza in the western world? It’s more than $3. There are lies, damn lies and statistics
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K@begottensun·
2 extra years to finish “projects”. They want us to be number 1.
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Living Tricks
Living Tricks@LivingTricks_·
Comparison of the world oldest languages
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K@begottensun·
@zandatoto Weirdly the method (using wires) have been more successful in finding us water on the farm than computers 🤣. I am also in shock
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zándā tōto
zándā tōto@zandatoto·
This pseudoscience thrives on the uncertainty of groundwater siting. If the bottle drops because there’s groundwater beneath that exact point, why wouldn’t it keep dropping a foot away, and the next foot, until the guy is out of the aquifer? If this method worked, the bottle wouldn’t just drop at one magical spot; it would drop continuously across the same groundwater zone.
Riley@RileyTTS

I called this engineer, who told me he is an expert in drilling boreholes. On arrival, this is how he is locating water underground. I am still in shock 😲🤧

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Jamwanda
Jamwanda@Jamwanda2·
INSTEAD OF COMING HERE WITH HIGH SCHOOL RESPONSES TO KEY ECONOMIC AND INDUSTRIAL QUESTIONS, DEAR ZIMBABWEANS, CAN YOU TAKE TIME TO LISTEN TO THIS CLIP? Please!!!!
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Typical African
Typical African@Joe__Bassey·
Did you know that members of the Kamba community in today's Kenya 🇰🇪 during pre-colonial times used to file their teeth to a point....1919..
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Historical Facts
Historical Facts@ZimbabweHistor2·
RESISTING PORTUGUESE OCCUPATION AND INFLUENCE In the pre-colonial era, Shona chiefs and rulers in the region of modern-day Zimbabwe (primarily within the Mutapa Empire, also known as Mwene Mutapa or Monomotapa) resisted Portuguese attempts at occupation, control, and economic domination from the 16th to late 17th centuries. The Portuguese sought gold, ivory, and trade monopolies after arriving on the East African coast around 1505, gradually pushing inland along the Zambezi River. The Mutapa Empire (c. 1450–1760), a major Shona polity, initially engaged with the Portuguese through trade but faced increasing interference. Resistance took several forms: 1. Military confrontations and expulsion. Shona rulers periodically expelled Portuguese traders, settlers, and missionaries. For example, in the 1670s, Mutapa Mukombwe (or Makombwe) waged extensive warfare to drive the Portuguese out of their fortresses and farms in the interior, significantly weakening their influence temporarily. 2. Direct battles against Portuguese forces — The most decisive resistance came from the Rozvi (or Rozwi), another powerful Shona group that emerged in the late 17th century under Changamire Dombo (a breakaway leader dissatisfied with Mutapa's handling of Portuguese intrusion). Dombo's forces defeated the Portuguese in key battles, including: The Battle of Mahungwe (1684). The Battle of Dambarare (1693), where they destroyed the Portuguese fair-town (trading post) of Dambarare near the Mutapa capital, massacred traders, and halted Portuguese attempts to seize gold mines. These victories forced the Portuguese back and reduced their inland presence for a time. Exploitation of internal divisions — The Portuguese often exploited succession disputes and civil wars within the Mutapa state by supporting rival claimants to the throne, installing puppet rulers, or demanding vassalage (e.g., treaties in the 1620s–1630s). Shona rulers resisted by rejecting such interference when possible, refusing tribute demands, or allying against Portuguese-backed factions. Broader strategies — Resistance included maintaining control over gold mines and trade routes, occasional alliances with other groups against the Portuguese, and limiting foreign settlements. While some Mutapa rulers signed treaties or accepted limited Portuguese presence for military aid against rebels, many actively opposed deeper occupation. Overall, Shona resistance prevented full Portuguese conquest of the Zimbabwean plateau interior during the pre-colonial period. The Mutapa Empire weakened due to internal strife and external pressures (including from the Rozvi), but outright occupation only intensified later with British colonialism in the 1890s. Changamire Dombo's campaigns represented one of the most successful organized efforts by Shona leaders to repel European encroachment before the colonial scramble.
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Yusuf Abramjee
Yusuf Abramjee@Abramjee·
Punch-up at McDonalds, Stellenbosch, Cape Town.
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Sangwa Sifa Florence
Sangwa Sifa Florence@SangwaSifa·
What is the name of this pig breed? Help a farmer 👩‍🌾
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Lovemore Mahachi retweetledi
mmatigari
mmatigari@matigary·
I think this is the best tour guide ⁦@Zimparks⁩ has 😂😂😂 “MaGD6 anofamba manheru, mapere” 😂 I hear Mhofu ⁦⁦@Jamwanda2⁩ ‘s voice in that clip 😂
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Big Chi
Big Chi@It_Chioma·
This woman cooks with so much love 🥰😍
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Watch as a fox dodges a falcon’s capture not once, not twice, but three times
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Makana 2
Makana 2@MashayamombeS·
@Jamwanda2 What is stopping our governments to do more research about this I know munogona kumira mira, the name museveni it has straight meaning ini shona. Museve, kuseva, museve wekupfura, then ni inoshanda pakawanda means me eg mwanyenyeni
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Jamwanda
Jamwanda@Jamwanda2·
LISTEN TO PRESIDENT M-7 SPEAKING IN LOCAL LANGUAGE OF UGANDA; CHECK HOW “Nyama yerufu” in Nyangole Language means exactly the same in Shona!!!!!
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