A sociolinguistic study of the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language

This work investigates the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language. From a sociolinguistic perspective, it examines the reasons why people code-mix English with Yoruba and the effects of the code-mixing on the Yoruba language. The study is modeled after Crystal’s (2000) theory o...

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Main Author: Oluwaseun Iyanuoluwa Owolola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Andalas 2018-04-01
Series:Arbitrer
Online Access:http://arbitrer.fib.unand.ac.id/index.php/arbitrer/article/view/100
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spelling doaj-eb03abf6e05f465fa8e09fb3fe0662bd2021-07-02T07:21:17ZengUniversitas AndalasArbitrer2339-11622550-10112018-04-0151233010.25077/ar.5.1.23-30.201874A sociolinguistic study of the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba languageOluwaseun Iyanuoluwa Owolola0Basic and General Studies Dept. Federal College of Forestry, Jericho Ibadan.This work investigates the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language. From a sociolinguistic perspective, it examines the reasons why people code-mix English with Yoruba and the effects of the code-mixing on the Yoruba language. The study is modeled after Crystal’s (2000) theory of language death. Data for the study was collected with the use of self-designed questionnaire which was administered to 100 respondents. The analysis of the responses shows that a number of lexical items of the Yoruba language have been lost by the native speakers as a result Yoruba-English code-mixing. It also reveals that this sociolinguistic phenomenon may hamper the growth and development of the Yoruba language as it has become more convenient for Yoruba speakers to code-mix than to coin new words for new concepts, items or ideas. The study, therefore, concludes that uncontrolled Yoruba-English code-mixing may render the use of the Yoruba language moribund, consequently leading to the death of the language. It is recommended that the native speakers of Yoruba should make conscious efforts to use “pure” Yoruba, minimizing the use of code-mix.http://arbitrer.fib.unand.ac.id/index.php/arbitrer/article/view/100
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oluwaseun Iyanuoluwa Owolola
spellingShingle Oluwaseun Iyanuoluwa Owolola
A sociolinguistic study of the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language
Arbitrer
author_facet Oluwaseun Iyanuoluwa Owolola
author_sort Oluwaseun Iyanuoluwa Owolola
title A sociolinguistic study of the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language
title_short A sociolinguistic study of the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language
title_full A sociolinguistic study of the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language
title_fullStr A sociolinguistic study of the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language
title_full_unstemmed A sociolinguistic study of the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language
title_sort sociolinguistic study of the effects of yoruba-english code-mixing on the yoruba language
publisher Universitas Andalas
series Arbitrer
issn 2339-1162
2550-1011
publishDate 2018-04-01
description This work investigates the effects of Yoruba-English Code-mixing on the Yoruba language. From a sociolinguistic perspective, it examines the reasons why people code-mix English with Yoruba and the effects of the code-mixing on the Yoruba language. The study is modeled after Crystal’s (2000) theory of language death. Data for the study was collected with the use of self-designed questionnaire which was administered to 100 respondents. The analysis of the responses shows that a number of lexical items of the Yoruba language have been lost by the native speakers as a result Yoruba-English code-mixing. It also reveals that this sociolinguistic phenomenon may hamper the growth and development of the Yoruba language as it has become more convenient for Yoruba speakers to code-mix than to coin new words for new concepts, items or ideas. The study, therefore, concludes that uncontrolled Yoruba-English code-mixing may render the use of the Yoruba language moribund, consequently leading to the death of the language. It is recommended that the native speakers of Yoruba should make conscious efforts to use “pure” Yoruba, minimizing the use of code-mix.
url http://arbitrer.fib.unand.ac.id/index.php/arbitrer/article/view/100
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