Teacher, assignment excuses and village people powers
B1 English listening practice · Nigerian English · Curated for intermediate learners
What does “village people” mean in Nigerian English?
Village people in Nigerian English does not mean “people who live in a village.” It refers to ancestral or witchcraft forces from one’s home village, said to follow you to the city and cause bad luck. When a Nigerian’s car breaks down, a deal falls through, or a relationship ends, the joking explanation is “my village people are at it again.” The phrase started as a real spiritual belief in many Nigerian communities, became a Nollywood drama trope, and is now a meme used by Nigerians worldwide.
In this classroom clip, a teacher warns students who hand in late work that “after writing them, your village people will visit you.” The line lands as both joke and threat at once.
Vocabulary frequency
How common is the vocabulary in this B1 English listening practice?
General English frequency
Spoken English frequency
Less common words in this reel
These words appear less frequently in English, but are useful in real conversations:
Source: wordfreq 3.1.1 (general) · SUBTLEX-US 2012 (spoken). Buckets approximate; exact ranks not stored.
- ▸In Nollywood films and Nigerian dramas (The Wedding Party, Living in Bondage)
- ▸In Nigerian Twitter and TikTok memes about everyday bad luck
- ▸In Nigerian stand-up specials (Basket Mouth, Bovi, AY Makun)
- ▸In Nigerian football and sports commentary after a missed penalty
- ▸In Nigerian family WhatsApp jokes about misfortune
Find your Nigerian English level
Place yourself on the A1-C2 scale and unlock reels that match where you are.
Start quiz →