Article published In: English World-Wide
Vol. 20:2 (1999) ► pp.217–236
What do We Really Know About Kenyan English?
A Pilot Study in Research Methodology
Published online: 13 March 2000
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.20.2.02ska
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.20.2.02ska
Despite the growing interest in the New Englishes, systematic research into the features of many of these varieties is still lacking. This paper looks at the work that has been done on the features of Kenyan English. It attempts to show that only a combination of corpus analyses, elicitation tests, and the introspection of target language speakers yields reliable results that come up to the expectations of modern linguistics. A re-examination of some of the features listed in the relevant studies by means of these three methods suggests that part of what has been written about Kenyan English may be a misrepresentation of the linguistic reality.
Cited by (9)
Cited by nine other publications
Page, Nathan
Balasubramanian, Chandrika
2015. Corpus linguistics and New Englishes. In Corpus-based Research in Applied Linguistics [Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 66], ► pp. 147 ff.
Balasubramanian, Chandrika
Meierkord, Christiane
Campbell, David & Patrick Walsh
MUTONYA, MUNGAI
[no author supplied]
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