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Volume 2 of African Languages includes articles originally
published in 1976, written in French and English on educational,
literary, cultural, historical and socio-linguistic aspects of
language in Africa, as well as descriptive and comparative studies.
Among others there are chapters on an early Vai manuscript from
Liberia, John Clarke's unidentified Nago dialect and swahili
secondary education in Tanzania.
Volume 3 of African Languages includes articles originally
published in 1977, written in French and English on educational,
literary, cultural, historical and socio-linguistic aspects of
language in Africa, as well as descriptive and comparative studies.
Among others there are chapters on the national language issue in
Africa (Akan in Ghana), a socio-linguistic case study of the Hausa
language in Nigeria and assimiliation and lexical coinages in Igbo.
Volume 4 of African Languages includes articles originally
published in 1978, written in French and English on educational,
literary, cultural, historical and socio-linguistic aspects of
language in Africa, as well as descriptive and comparative studies.
Among others there are chapters on lexical innovation in Zambian
languages, Portuguese creole of Senegal, the application of ethics
in Hausa didactic poetry.
Volume 5 (1) of African Languages originally published in 1979, is
a special issue focussing on the Bantu languages in Tanzania. The
languages are discussed according to 4 regions of Tanzania and
although the sub-grouping is lexicostatistical, the classification
is borne out by other consdierations, such as phonology and verbal
morphology.
Volume 5 (2) of African Languages originally published in 1979, is
a special issue focussing on languages and education in Africa.
There are chapters on African language education from a
socio-linguistic perspective, the problems of bi-lingualism and
multi-lingualism in Zaire and small languages in primary education.
Volume 2 of African Languages includes articles originally
published in 1976, written in French and English on educational,
literary, cultural, historical and socio-linguistic aspects of
language in Africa, as well as descriptive and comparative studies.
Among others there are chapters on an early Vai manuscript from
Liberia, John Clarke's unidentified Nago dialect and swahili
secondary education in Tanzania.
Volume 3 of African Languages includes articles originally
published in 1977, written in French and English on educational,
literary, cultural, historical and socio-linguistic aspects of
language in Africa, as well as descriptive and comparative studies.
Among others there are chapters on the national language issue in
Africa (Akan in Ghana), a socio-linguistic case study of the Hausa
language in Nigeria and assimiliation and lexical coinages in Igbo.
Volume 4 of African Languages includes articles originally
published in 1978, written in French and English on educational,
literary, cultural, historical and socio-linguistic aspects of
language in Africa, as well as descriptive and comparative studies.
Among others there are chapters on lexical innovation in Zambian
languages, Portuguese creole of Senegal, the application of ethics
in Hausa didactic poetry.
Volume 5 (1) of African Languages originally published in 1979, is
a special issue focussing on the Bantu languages in Tanzania. The
languages are discussed according to 4 regions of Tanzania and
although the sub-grouping is lexicostatistical, the classification
is borne out by other consdierations, such as phonology and verbal
morphology.
Volume 5 (2) of African Languages originally published in 1979, is
a special issue focussing on languages and education in Africa.
There are chapters on African language education from a
socio-linguistic perspective, the problems of bi-lingualism and
multi-lingualism in Zaire and small languages in primary education.
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