University of Cape Coast Institutional Repository

Department of Ghanaian Languages & Linguistics

Department of Ghanaian Languages & Linguistics

 

Recent Submissions

  • Quayson, Anita William; Ofori, Emmanuel Amo (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    Studies on language have drawn the attention of many scholars over decades because of language’s feature-social phenomena. Social phenomenon of language is a feature that states that language is utilized when it is identified ...
  • Adjei, Lawrencia Nyamekye; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015)
    This study aimed at finding out why and how students employ the use of sarcasm. The students of University of Cape Coast served as a case study. It also discussed how the social variables - gender and age influence the ...
  • Dadzie, Gloria; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015)
    In recent years, the standard of English has been criticised as being low. The Chief Examiner’s Report on the 2001 – 2010 Basic Education Certificate Examination (B.E.C.E.) singled out poor spelling as a major cause of the ...
  • Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2011)
    The study examines the duration of Akan nasal consonants at different word positions. In all, 70 speakers were recorded, ten from each of the seven Akan communities, made up of five males and five females. The subjects ...
  • Appiah, Richard Anane; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015)
    Verbal threat is a face threatening acts that confront people. It is a language phenomenon that can generate quarrel, fight, confusion, chaos, etc. This study investigates causes, aims and effects of verbal threat, among ...
  • Ofori, Emmanuel Amo (University of Cape Coast, 2017)
    Many scholars have argued that insults are meant to cause mental pain, embarrassment, and disgrace; they violate the principle of politeness; and they are face-threatening acts (Agyekum, 2004; Leech, 1983; Brown & Levinson, ...
  • Totimeh, Esther Ofosua; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015)
    This paper investigates into various ways by which native speakers of the Akyem Twi dialect of the Akan Language of Ghana make polite request and how social variables such as age, gender and socio-economic status influence ...
  • Korsah, Sampson (University of Cape Coast, 2014)
    Several analyses have been proposed for the “inherent complement erbs” (ICVs) of the Kwa languages. In this paper, I propose that given the morphosyntactic and semantic properties of both the erb and its complement, it ...
  • Carl, Florian; Otchere, Eric D. (University of Cape Coast, 2014)
    The sonic culture of any place is always locally specific. Yet, beyond cultural differences, there are more general health implications of sound production and exposure, particularly where high sound levels with potentially ...
  • Ofori, Emmanuel Amo (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    Intertextuality is the idea that “text cannot be viewed or studied in isolation since texts are not produced or consumed in isolation: all texts exist, and therefore must be understood, in relation to other texts” (Richardson, ...
  • Korsah, Sampson (University of Cape Coast, 2009)
    This paper proposes a solution to a Richness of the Base problem that is inherent in the morpho-tonology of Gã verbs to which the imperative morpheme i.e. a floating high tone (plus sometimes, a segmental -m´) suffix is ...
  • Korsah, Sampson (University of Cape Coast, 2009)
    There seems to be an intricate connection between reduplication of indefinite DPs and clausal negation in Gã; the reduplication is only permitted in the presence of negation. Thus, such reduplicated DPs can be construed ...
  • Ofori, Emmanuel Amo (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    Following the discussions of Bodomo and Marfo’s (2002) morphophonological analysis of Akan and Dagaare noun class system using number marking: singular and plural within Lexical Phonology theoretical framework, the present ...
  • Maskowah, Amy L.; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    This ethnographic inquiry examines the cultural congruence between home and school in rural Ghana, exploring the cultural norms of child-rearing practices within families and the institution of schooling. The data illustrate ...
  • Owusu, Mary A. S.; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015-05-19)
    This paper contests Butler’s theory of gender performativity established on the premise that gender is made real through the constant enactment of certain behaviours that are learnt. Butler posits that, gender can be defined ...
  • Wonkyi, Patrick Nana; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2020-07-19)
    Within the framework of Conceptual Metaphor Theory by Lakoff, G. and Johnson, M., the present paper analyzes the expressions in the Mfantse dialect of Akan, which communicate the state of overmaturity in farm products, ...
  • Kubi, Benjamin (University of Cape Coast, 2017)
    Love is a subject that has received a lot of attention in literature, and poetry especially has seen much on love than any other genre, probably because it is traditionally seen as the creative exploration and expression ...
  • Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2020-05-08)
    The study which is ethnographic in nature employs qualitative and acoustic analytical approach to examine [m] and [n] as syllabic consonants in Akan. In all, 30 Akan (Akuapem, Asante Twi and Fantse) native speakers were ...
  • Korsah, Sampson (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    In Akan, resumption is obligatory for extraction from a subject position. Accordingly, there is usually agreement between the resumptive pronoun (RP) and its referent constituent. However, data from the Asante-Twi dialect ...
  • Quayson, Anita William; Ofori, Emmanuel Amo (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    Studies on language have drawn the attention of many scholars over decades because of language’s feature-social phenomena. Social phenomenon of language is a feature that states that language is utilized when it is identified ...
  • Adjei, Lawrencia Nyamekye; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015)
    This study aimed at finding out why and how students employ the use of sarcasm. The students of University of Cape Coast served as a case study. It also discussed how the social variables - gender and age influence the ...
  • Dadzie, Gloria; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015)
    In recent years, the standard of English has been criticised as being low. The Chief Examiner’s Report on the 2001 – 2010 Basic Education Certificate Examination (B.E.C.E.) singled out poor spelling as a major cause of the ...
  • Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2011)
    The study examines the duration of Akan nasal consonants at different word positions. In all, 70 speakers were recorded, ten from each of the seven Akan communities, made up of five males and five females. The subjects ...
  • Appiah, Richard Anane; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015)
    Verbal threat is a face threatening acts that confront people. It is a language phenomenon that can generate quarrel, fight, confusion, chaos, etc. This study investigates causes, aims and effects of verbal threat, among ...
  • Ofori, Emmanuel Amo (University of Cape Coast, 2017)
    Many scholars have argued that insults are meant to cause mental pain, embarrassment, and disgrace; they violate the principle of politeness; and they are face-threatening acts (Agyekum, 2004; Leech, 1983; Brown & Levinson, ...
  • Totimeh, Esther Ofosua; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015)
    This paper investigates into various ways by which native speakers of the Akyem Twi dialect of the Akan Language of Ghana make polite request and how social variables such as age, gender and socio-economic status influence ...
  • Korsah, Sampson (University of Cape Coast, 2014)
    Several analyses have been proposed for the “inherent complement erbs” (ICVs) of the Kwa languages. In this paper, I propose that given the morphosyntactic and semantic properties of both the erb and its complement, it ...
  • Carl, Florian; Otchere, Eric D. (University of Cape Coast, 2014)
    The sonic culture of any place is always locally specific. Yet, beyond cultural differences, there are more general health implications of sound production and exposure, particularly where high sound levels with potentially ...
  • Ofori, Emmanuel Amo (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    Intertextuality is the idea that “text cannot be viewed or studied in isolation since texts are not produced or consumed in isolation: all texts exist, and therefore must be understood, in relation to other texts” (Richardson, ...
  • Korsah, Sampson (University of Cape Coast, 2009)
    This paper proposes a solution to a Richness of the Base problem that is inherent in the morpho-tonology of Gã verbs to which the imperative morpheme i.e. a floating high tone (plus sometimes, a segmental -m´) suffix is ...
  • Korsah, Sampson (University of Cape Coast, 2009)
    There seems to be an intricate connection between reduplication of indefinite DPs and clausal negation in Gã; the reduplication is only permitted in the presence of negation. Thus, such reduplicated DPs can be construed ...
  • Ofori, Emmanuel Amo (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    Following the discussions of Bodomo and Marfo’s (2002) morphophonological analysis of Akan and Dagaare noun class system using number marking: singular and plural within Lexical Phonology theoretical framework, the present ...
  • Maskowah, Amy L.; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    This ethnographic inquiry examines the cultural congruence between home and school in rural Ghana, exploring the cultural norms of child-rearing practices within families and the institution of schooling. The data illustrate ...
  • Owusu, Mary A. S.; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2015-05-19)
    This paper contests Butler’s theory of gender performativity established on the premise that gender is made real through the constant enactment of certain behaviours that are learnt. Butler posits that, gender can be defined ...
  • Wonkyi, Patrick Nana; Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2020-07-19)
    Within the framework of Conceptual Metaphor Theory by Lakoff, G. and Johnson, M., the present paper analyzes the expressions in the Mfantse dialect of Akan, which communicate the state of overmaturity in farm products, ...
  • Kubi, Benjamin (University of Cape Coast, 2017)
    Love is a subject that has received a lot of attention in literature, and poetry especially has seen much on love than any other genre, probably because it is traditionally seen as the creative exploration and expression ...
  • Bosiwah, Lawrence (University of Cape Coast, 2020-05-08)
    The study which is ethnographic in nature employs qualitative and acoustic analytical approach to examine [m] and [n] as syllabic consonants in Akan. In all, 30 Akan (Akuapem, Asante Twi and Fantse) native speakers were ...
  • Korsah, Sampson (University of Cape Coast, 2016)
    In Akan, resumption is obligatory for extraction from a subject position. Accordingly, there is usually agreement between the resumptive pronoun (RP) and its referent constituent. However, data from the Asante-Twi dialect ...

View more