The headline word should be 'seized' NOT 'ceased'. Complete two different words
While 'seize' means to take something with force, 'cease' means to stop as in cease fire during war which means to stop fighting
The headline word should be 'seized' NOT 'ceased'. Complete two different words
While 'seize' means to take something with force, 'cease' means to stop as in cease fire during war which means to stop fighting
Brempong 2 months ago
Ceased and sized, oo my God
Ghanaweb pe go write this.
Ceased and sized, oo my God
Ghanaweb pe go write this.
Oheneba+O.T 2 months ago
Say "seized", not "ceased"! Haba!!
Say "seized", not "ceased"! Haba!!
Amanshianyebi Okoe 2 months ago
Ceased or seized his passport? This is the result of fallen standards in education in Ghana, such that journalists are found wanting kɛkɛ!
Ceased or seized his passport? This is the result of fallen standards in education in Ghana, such that journalists are found wanting kɛkɛ!
Yiadom 2 months ago
If it indeed he ceaced his passport, then it's tantamount to slavery,
If it indeed he ceaced his passport, then it's tantamount to slavery,
Kwame 2 months ago
seized is correct.... simple...
afterall the sentence is in quotation marks which means it is Michael Edwards' own words. Dare I say, the English man is right; He seized the passport. Cease does not apply here....
seized is correct.... simple...
afterall the sentence is in quotation marks which means it is Michael Edwards' own words. Dare I say, the English man is right; He seized the passport. Cease does not apply here....
Kermit 2 months ago
Force labor
Force labor
Daniel Gomez 2 months ago
I couldn't comprehend the headline until I read the entire story. I told myself, Michael Edwards cannot cease Sulley Muntari's passport because the passport is not being processed for him. Even if the passport is under proce ... read full comment
I couldn't comprehend the headline until I read the entire story. I told myself, Michael Edwards cannot cease Sulley Muntari's passport because the passport is not being processed for him. Even if the passport is under process, Michael Edwards wasn't the CEO of the passport office either in Ghana or UK.
Michael Edwards can only seized Muntari's passport being the director for the club then. This error cannot be said of as been typographical, but rather a very very bad English from a sports journalist.
This is a serious indictment to Ghanaweb and by extension, our educational system. For Ghanaweb, don't they conduct interview before recruiting their personels? A simple word for a simple headline which ought to have been edited has taken the entire shade from a beautiful story.
I'm very much ashamed for this writer, Ghanaweb and Ghana at large. If the politicisation of our educational system is not attended to as immediate as possible, I can forsee the worst in the immediate future. Mediocrity at it's best.
The headline word should be 'seized' NOT 'ceased'. Complete two different words
While 'seize' means to take something with force, 'cease' means to stop as in cease fire during war which means to stop fighting
Ceased and sized, oo my God
Ghanaweb pe go write this.
Say "seized", not "ceased"! Haba!!
Ceased or seized his passport? This is the result of fallen standards in education in Ghana, such that journalists are found wanting kɛkɛ!
If it indeed he ceaced his passport, then it's tantamount to slavery,
seized is correct.... simple...
afterall the sentence is in quotation marks which means it is Michael Edwards' own words. Dare I say, the English man is right; He seized the passport. Cease does not apply here....
Force labor
I couldn't comprehend the headline until I read the entire story. I told myself, Michael Edwards cannot cease Sulley Muntari's passport because the passport is not being processed for him. Even if the passport is under proce ...
read full comment