Translanguaging patterns in everyday urban conversations in Cameroon

Journal article


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Strategic Research Themes


Publication Details

Author listAmbele E.A., Watson Todd R.

PublisherDe Gruyter

Publication year2021

ISSN0165-2516

eISSN1613-3668

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85112296540&doi=10.1515%2fijsl-2020-0118&partnerID=40&md5=a342d817dd3a9ca45b1a2f366a5a0b76

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Abstract

This study analyses the translanguaging patterns of urban Cameroonians' linguistic choices (e.g. lexical or phonological) in everyday conversations in Cameroon. Using observation and audio-recordings of 20 naturally occurring conversations as data, a descriptive corpus-based methodology was adopted for analysis. The quantitative approach utilises AntConc (Version 3.5.8) with descriptive analytical tools to identify the speakers' idiolectal choices in meaning-making translanguaging patterns. The results revealed salient patterns of the speakers' deployed lexical, grammatical, morphological, phonological and syntactical forms as an integrated system of language. It revealed the speakers preference for polysemous words (e.g. repe) over less polysemous words (e.g. father); choice for shorter lexical words (e.g. man) over longer words (e.g. manpikin); a preference for specialised gender-neutral markers (e.g. ih, which refers to both male and female) over gender-specific forms (e.g. he/she); a preference for voiceless interdental fricatives (e.g. dem, dey) over voiced interdental fricatives (e.g. them, they) and where the choice of inflectional morpheme expressing tense (e.g. ed) is one that can either be omitted or added to a word, the presence of this inflectional morpheme is sometimes fairly used. Such results have practical implications for understanding peoples' language use as a translanguaging act in bi/multilingual contexts. © 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston 2021.


Keywords

everyday conversationslinguistic repertoiretranslanguaging patternsurban Cameroonians


Last updated on 2023-26-09 at 07:37