<P> Pashto speakers (mainly Pashtun people from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and eastern Afghanistan) also use the Eid greeting "May your festival be blessed" (Pashto: اختر دی مبارک سه ‎; akhtar de nekmregha sha). Balochi speakers (mainly Baloch people from Balochistan province and Iran's Sistan and Baluchestan Province) also use the Eid greeting "May your Eid be blessed" (عید تر مبارک با ‎; aied tara mubarak ba). Brahui speakers may also use the Eid greeting "Have a blessed Eid" (عید نے مبارک مارے ‎; aied ne mubarak mare). </P> <P> Many Bangladeshis may also use the Eid greeting, "Eid's Greetings" (ঈদের শুভেচ্ছা; Eider Shubheccha). </P> <P> Hausa language originally from Northern Nigeria is widely spoken among Muslims in West Africa . Their equivalent Eid greetings in Hausa is "Barka da Sallah" which translates to "blessed Eid prayers". </P> <P> "Ni ti yuun' palli" is the Eid greetings among Dagbanli speakers in Ghana . It means "Happy new Eid season". The Hausa greeting "Barka da Sallah" is also a common exchange during the period . </P>

What is the meaning of barka da sallah