In:Variation in Indigenous Minority Languages
Edited by James N. Stanford and Dennis R. Preston
[IMPACT: Studies in Language, Culture and Society 25] 2009
► pp. 229–244
9. Sociophonetic variation in urban Ewe
Published online: 15 April 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/impact.25.11nog
https://doi.org/10.1075/impact.25.11nog
Due to fast-paced urbanization and rural exodus, speakers of different dialects of the Ewe language are thrown together in Lome, the capital city of Togo. Using various theoretical approaches that attempt to address such phenomena, I provide a quantitative analysis suggesting that urban Ewe in southern Togo is undergoing processes of leveling and simplification. I investigate the use of bilabial fricatives, alveolar affricates, and reduplication (as dependent variables) to show that ethnicity, community setting, and gender are influential factors in Ewe language variation in southern Togo.
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Mansfield, John
Stanford, James N.
2023. Variationist sociolinguistic methods with Indigenous language communities. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 13:1 ► pp. 106 ff.
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