 Hey Weirdos, welcome to another edition of Behind the Microphone, where I share something stupid that happened to me on this side of the microphone that you don't normally get to hear on that side of the microphone. Today, while I was narrating today's episode of Weird Darkness, there's a story about some Japanese ghosts. And wait, was it the Japanese ghosts that was talking about this? Hold on a second, I'm not even sure it was even that story anymore. It was, no, I take it back. It was it was about about a British soldier. Okay, forget I said anything about the Japanese. Well, that story is in there too, but I had to try and pronounce a word here about a skirmish that took place between a couple of people in South Africa. And one of the peoples is spelled X-H-O-S-A. And from what I understand, that X sound is a sound kind of like, well, you'll hear in the video, I actually go to YouTube trying to look for a pronunciation on this, and they say that the word was actually used in the Black Panther, so I'm guessing they know how to say it. I could not get it. And eventually through at the end, I just kind of attempt it and keep on going, and it sounded okay, but this is just one of the frustrations of being a professional voice artist. You'll hear it here. Many years ago, this area was the location of many skirmishes between the Zosia people. Let's take a look at the X-click, the horse riding click. What you do is you press your tongue against the upper side T and pull away. Got it? The trick is to practice the five vowels after the click and start with a big gap. Now we'll make the gap a little bit smaller. Got it? Now no gap. The Corsa language. The Corsa language. Corsa. Corsa. Corsa. A Corsa person. Un Corsa. Un Corsa. Corsa people. Corsa. Amacosa. Corsa. Corsa. Corsa. Corsa. Corsa. That one. All right. Many years ago, this area was the location of many skirmishes between the Zosia people. Between the X-click, the Corsa people. Many skirmishes between the Glosser people, it's X-O-H-O-X-H-O-S-A between the Glosser people who were moving south after being displaced by the Zulus and the British who were deployed to the area to defend colonial settlers. Thanks for listening to Behind the Microphone. Please be sure to subscribe and click the notification bell so you don't miss any of my future videos, including my daily podcast, Weird Darkness. See you later, Weirdos!