is also a familiar surname in South African football (e.g., Coach Kgoloko Thobejane).
If you can provide (e.g., Facebook, a news site, a book), I can help you find the specific context.
appears frequently in social media commentary (often as "yadi love back," "yadi book'a," or simply a term in a phrase). "Sele" appears as a surname (e.g., Sele Mohlolo).
The results indicate that the terms seem to be fragmented from various Lesotho or South African social media posts, community discussions, or a mixture of different names in Sesotho context:
The phrasing "Thojane Yadi Sele" appears to be part of a sentence or a combination of names from a specific social media post, rather than an article.
appears as a surname/name, potentially referencing a community member or individuals like "Neo Thojane" in a World Bank project document or a "Thojane Malejoane" in social media comments.
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Thojane Yadi Sele 🆕
is also a familiar surname in South African football (e.g., Coach Kgoloko Thobejane).
If you can provide (e.g., Facebook, a news site, a book), I can help you find the specific context.
appears frequently in social media commentary (often as "yadi love back," "yadi book'a," or simply a term in a phrase). "Sele" appears as a surname (e.g., Sele Mohlolo).
The results indicate that the terms seem to be fragmented from various Lesotho or South African social media posts, community discussions, or a mixture of different names in Sesotho context:
The phrasing "Thojane Yadi Sele" appears to be part of a sentence or a combination of names from a specific social media post, rather than an article.
appears as a surname/name, potentially referencing a community member or individuals like "Neo Thojane" in a World Bank project document or a "Thojane Malejoane" in social media comments.