Compounding in Igala: Defining Criteria, Forms and Functions

Date

2020-01-01

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Department of Languages and Linguistics, Nasarawa State University, Keffi

Abstract

In spite of the fact that compounding is really pervasive in the world's languages and despite the huge volume of literatures on compounding in languages including African languages, a critical assessment of the extant literature on compounding in African linguistics reveals that providing satisfactory criteria for defining compound hood still requires both language specific and cross-linguistic investigations for dependable linguistic generalizations. In Igala, in particular, not much attention has been devoted to describing compounding. The present study therefore investigates compounding in Igala, a West Benue-Congo language spoken in north central Nigeria. Defining compound hood and distinguishing compound words in Igala, the study shows and favours semantic criteria above phonological and syntactic considerations. Compounding generally has been found to be a highly productive word formation process in Iglala in terms of forms and functions.http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/uiah.vl3i2.10

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Citation

Anagbogu, P. N 1995. ‘The strong boundary condition for compounds: the Igbo perspective’. In E.N. Emenanjo & O-M. Ndimele (eds.). Issues in African languages and linguistics: essays in honour of Kay Williamson. Aba: NINLAN Books, 246-257. Anagbogu, P. N 2000. ‘The semantic link in Igbo nominal compounding’. Journal of the linguistic association of Nigeria (JOLAN), No. 5, 40-44. Anagbogu, P. N 2003.‘Prefixes of the Koring verb’. In O-M. Ndimele (ed.). Four decades in the study of language and linguistics: a festschrift for Kay Williamson. Aba: National Institute for Nigerian Languages. NINLAN pp. 691-699.

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