In:Ugandan English: Its sociolinguistics, structure and uses in a globalising post-protectorate
Edited by Christiane Meierkord, Bebwa Isingoma and Saudah Namyalo
[Varieties of English Around the World G59] 2016
► pp. 121–148
Diphthongs in Ugandan English
Evidence for and against variety status and Interactions across Englishes
Published online: 20 October 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/veaw.g59.06mei
https://doi.org/10.1075/veaw.g59.06mei
This chapter examines whether Luganda influence on Ugandan English can be
confirmed at the level of phonology or whether Ugandan English is the result of
Interactions across ethnic Englishes in the sense of Meierkord (2012). It presents
the results of spectrographic analyses of the lexical sets face, goat, price,
choice, and mouth, focusing on fifteen speakers who have Acholi-Lango,
Luganda and Runyankore-Rukiga as their first languages. These languages
differ as regards their vowel systems, particularly as regards their tolerance of
diphthongs. The results will be discussed with reference to Uganda’s present-day
sociolinguistic realities, to assess whether ethnic varieties of English exist and
whether Ugandan English is a homogeneous variety primarily influenced by
Luganda or the result of Interactions across Englishes.
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Isingoma, Bebwa & Christiane Meierkord
2019. Capturing the lexicon of Ugandan English. In Corpus Linguistics and African Englishes [Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 88], ► pp. 293 ff.
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