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Interestingly enough, the word “Botho” bottom of page, listed as values:
What is the meaning of Botho?
Respect
Botho incompletely translates from the national language Setswana into English as 'respect'. ... ' Botho is a value shared across the Southern African region that promotes harmony and respect amongst people living together.
And this:
Botho in A Dictionary of South African Englishhttps://dsae.co.za › entry › botho
1979 Voice 6 Oct. 9Botho means crying and sympathising with other children. Botho means knowing you are a child of the people not of Mr so-and-so.
Botho is a very busy word.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/4016223/posts
These Are the Symptoms of the Omicron Variant, South African Doctor Says
Best Life Online ^ | 11/27/21 | Richard Evans
**SNIP**
Angelique Coetzee, a doctor with a private practice in Pretoria and chair of the South African Medical Association (SAMA), told The Telegraph that so far Omicron cases seem to present with strange but mild symptoms. “Their symptoms were so different and so mild from those I had treated before,” she said.
Most of the Omicron patients Coetzee has treated arrived “feeling so tired,” making intense fatigue the most consistent symptom that’s been reported. On the other hand, none of these patients suffered from loss of taste or smell, which has been one of the tell-tale COVID symptoms up to this point.
In terms of other surprising symptoms, Coetzee told The Telegraph, “We had one very interesting case, a kid, about six-years-old, with a temperature and a very high pulse rate, and I wondered if I should admit her, but when I followed up two days later she was so much better.”
Coetzee has stressed that it’s too early to make any larger predictions about what an Omicron wave would mean for the world - and if we’ll even reach that point. In an interview with The Guardian, she reiterated that the cases she’s seen have been mild, but acknowledged that it’s too soon to know for sure if that will hold for a broader spectrum of Omicron infections.
“It’s all speculation at this stage. It may be it’s highly transmissible, but so far the cases we are seeing are extremely mild,” Coetzee said. “Maybe two weeks from now I will have a different opinion, but this is what we are seeing. So are we seriously worried? No. We are concerned and we watch what’s happening. But for now we’re saying, ‘OK, there’s a whole hype out there. [We’re] not sure why.’”