This study focuses on Gengbè, a language of the Gbè continuum spoken in southern Togo and Benin. It falls within the framework of dialectology/dialectometry and raises the issue of the status of Gengbè within the continuum. While some consider Gengbè to be a dialectal variant of Ewégbè, others consider it to be a distinct language with its own system. In view of this divergence, the problem of the sociolinguistic status of Gengbè vis-à-vis Ewegbè arises sharply. Based on the hypothesis that a dialectological /dialectometric study makes it possible to determine the sociolinguistic status of languages, this article sets out to define the status of Gengbè within Gbè on the basis of dialectometric, dialectological and historical data. The theoretical framework of reference for this study is (Guiter’s) dialectometry and (Capo’s) comparative approach. The dialectometric theory was used to determine the linguistic distance between the two languages studied. The comparative approach was used to identify similarities and differences between Ewégbè and Gengbè. Data collection was based on a dual methodological approach, namely fieldwork and documentary research.
On the basis of the analysis and interpretation of dialectometric, dialectological and historical data, we have come to the conclusion that Gengbè is a dialectal variant of Ewégbè that it is widely spoken in Southern Togo and has been koineised in Lomé.
Keywords: Gengbè, lexical distance, linguistic distance, phonological equivalence, lexical equivalence.
Secondary Menu
-
News
- Évolution de la prise en compte de la Santé Sécurité au Travail dans les entreprises en Normandie, France : quelles avancées avec l’ISO 45001 ?
- Identités et altérité dans Une enfance métissée d’Abdallah Mdarhri Alaoui
- Accréditation des offres de formation de Licence en Sciences Infirmières et en Sciences Obstétricales de l’Institut National Médico-Sanitaire du Bénin : chemin parcouru et leçons apprises
- Editorial team
- The Redeemed Black Identity in Margaret Walker’s « For My People » and Langston Hughes’s « I, Too »: A Critical Race Theory Reading
Commentaires récents
- smouzou dans Uirtus Vol. 1, N°. 1; Août 2021
- Uirtus Vol 1 N° 1 – uirtus dans Bibliographie
- DAHE Youlde Stéphane dans Uirtus Vol. 1, N°. 1; Août 2021
- Uirtus Vol 1 N° 1 – uirtus dans Le prince Fama dans Les soleils des indépendances d’Ahmadou Kourouma : Des honneurs à l’horreur
- Uirtus Vol 1 N° 1 – uirtus dans Le prince Fama dans Les soleils des indépendances d’Ahmadou Kourouma : Des honneurs à l’horreur