Ɛyɛ adeɛ a yɛtae de di dwuma , Ɛyɛ abɔfra a nawofoɔ awu na yɛfrɛ no awesia. Sɛ yɛde retoto mmoa ho a, Ɛyɛ deɛ ne maame awu nko ara,(i.e. Sɛ maame no na awu a ne mma no yɛ agyanka mfa ho sɛ papa no te ase).
== DefinitionsAgyanka ase kyerɛ ==
OrphanAgyanka ona mother'sɔwɔ gravene maame nna so by [[Uroš Predić]] inwɔ 1888afe1888.
Nnipakuo bi kyerɛkuerɛ agyanka mu sɛ wɔbɛhu. Nkyerɛkyerɛ mu baako a wɔde di dwuma wɔ [[United States]] ne sɛ ɛyɛ obi a nawofoɔ awu anaa ntam atete.
Various groups use different definitions to identify orphans. One legal definition used in the [[United States]] is a [[Minor (law)|minor]]<nowiki/>bereft through "death or disappearance of, abandonment or desertion by, or separation or loss from, both parents".
InDeɛ theedi commonmu usene sɛ,Agyanka anyɛ orphanobi doesa notɔnni haveawofoɔ anybi survivinga parentwɔbɛhwɛ to care for themwɔn. HoweverNanso, the [[United Nations Children's Fund]] (UNICEF), [[Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS]](UNAIDS), andne otherekuo groupshuu labelsɛ anyabɔfra childbiara whowahwere hasnawofoɔ lostbiara oneyɛ parent as an orphanagyanka. InWei thisnti approach,abɔfra a maternal orphan is a child whose mother has died, a paternal orphan is a child whose father has died, and a double orphan is a child/teen/infant who has lost both parents. This contrasts withne themaame olderawu useyɛ ofagyanka half-orphanɛnna todeɛ describeawofoɔ childrenbaanu whone hadnyinaa lostawu onlynso onede parentawesia.