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・ Khanty-Mansiysky
・ Khanty-Mansiysky District
・ Khanu Woralaksaburi District
・ Khanui River
・ Khanuk
・ Khanuk Rural District
・ Khanum
・ Khanum Haji
・ Khanupahn
・ Khanuparude (Rambabu Prasai)
・ Khanwa
・ Khanwilkar (Gwalior cricketer)
・ Khanya College
・ Khanya Mkangisa
・ Khanyi Dhlomo
Khanyi Mbau
・ Khanyisile Litchfield-Tshabalala
・ Khanzad Hotel
・ Khanzada (disambiguation)
・ Khanzada Begum
・ Khanzada Khan
・ Khanzada Rajputs
・ Khanzadipur
・ Khanzahi
・ Khanzir
・ Khao
・ Khao Ang Rue Nai Wildlife Sanctuary
・ Khao chae
・ Khao Chaison District
・ Khao Chaison Railway Station


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Khanyi Mbau : ウィキペディア英語版
Khanyi Mbau

Khanyisile Mbau (born October 15, 1985) known professionally as Khanyi Mbau is a South African television personality, actress and socialite diva. Raised in Soweto, Mbau rose to widespread prominence and became a household name as the second Doobsie in the SABC2 soap opera ''Muvhango'' (2004-2005); as Mbali in the SABC1 soap opera ''Mzansi'' and SABC1's mini-series After Nine. She is the host of ''Katch It With Khanyi''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Katch It With Khanyi )
==Early life==
Khanyisile Mbau was born at Florence Nightingale Hospital in Hillbrow in Johannesburg on the evening of October 15, 1985. Her mother, Lynette Sisi Mbau was a 25-year-old corporate climber working in the finance department of the pension fund at Barclays Bank. Mbau's father Menzi Mcunu was not married to her mother at the time as the couple was only dating. Mcunu had no claim to the child but he named her nevertheless: Khanyisile, ''one who brings light''. Mbau kept her mother’s surname. Lynette soon left baby Khanyi with her parents in Mofolo, Soweto and returned to work. Her grandmother would virtually raise her.
Mbau’s grandparents were very Western in the way they dressed and saw the world. Mbau said “Gladys (her grandmother) would can you if you broke the rules. She ran her household with the decorum and attention to detail of Buckingham Palace” Mbau lovingly referred to her as the “Queen of England”
Mbau attended a white-only crèche called Flock on Eloff Street in downtown Johannesburg. The founder of the school had immigrated to South Africa from England and no hang-ups about racial mixing. Surrounded by blondes and brunettes with piercing blue eyes at her crèche, Mbau noticed there was something different about her.
In August 2012, Mbau released her biography〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Bitch, please! I'm Khanyi Mbau )〕 “Bitch, Please! I’m Khanyi Mbau” written by the journalist Lesley Mofokeng. Late 2014, Mbau participated in SABC3’s season 7 of ''Strictly Come Dancing''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Strictly Come Dancing responds to Khanyi Mbau drama )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Strictly Come Dancing )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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