It is habitual for graduating students of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria, to roll out the drums the very day they finish writing their final examination. Characteristic of such a ritualistic exercise, among other things, are the brand names the students coin for themselves from their original names. This study focuses on the creative rewriting of the names on such an occasion and examines the linguistic habits exhibited therein. It analyses the phonological/graphematic features that mark the rewritng of the names and discusses the sociolinguistic implications for the phenomena of social identity construction and language contact situation. Data for the study was sourced mainly through participant-observation technique with...
Although a lot of scholarly research has been done on Yoruba names, little or no literature exist on...
Reduplication is a product of interference, a major phenomenon in the interlingual study. Lexical Re...
The subject of naming is a universal one (Ajileye and Ajileye, 2003) but it has different importance...
It is habitual for graduating students of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria, to roll ...
The concept of name and naming is not just a tool for constructing identity; it is an important sign...
Every being has name as identity, and surname can mark identity among people within a community. Thu...
This study examines the perceived but obvious manifestation of name-clipping among Omambala cultural...
This study is a fusion of two different linguistic fields of studies joint to become one. These two ...
In Cross River State, South-eastern Nigeria, languages incorporate a number of loanwords as personal...
This paper examines the forms and functions of address terms employed among staff members and the la...
Names are cultural indicators used to identify or designate a person or an object. There is an abund...
Using the Speech Act Theory as propounded by Austin (1962) and articulated in Searle (1969), Cole (...
While the subject of Yoruba names has been significantly explored by previous studies, this paper di...
Naming can sometimes be associated with particular situations or someone’s birth. This study intends...
This paper examines Igbo personal names from the perspectives of anthropological linguistics, socio-...
Although a lot of scholarly research has been done on Yoruba names, little or no literature exist on...
Reduplication is a product of interference, a major phenomenon in the interlingual study. Lexical Re...
The subject of naming is a universal one (Ajileye and Ajileye, 2003) but it has different importance...
It is habitual for graduating students of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria, to roll ...
The concept of name and naming is not just a tool for constructing identity; it is an important sign...
Every being has name as identity, and surname can mark identity among people within a community. Thu...
This study examines the perceived but obvious manifestation of name-clipping among Omambala cultural...
This study is a fusion of two different linguistic fields of studies joint to become one. These two ...
In Cross River State, South-eastern Nigeria, languages incorporate a number of loanwords as personal...
This paper examines the forms and functions of address terms employed among staff members and the la...
Names are cultural indicators used to identify or designate a person or an object. There is an abund...
Using the Speech Act Theory as propounded by Austin (1962) and articulated in Searle (1969), Cole (...
While the subject of Yoruba names has been significantly explored by previous studies, this paper di...
Naming can sometimes be associated with particular situations or someone’s birth. This study intends...
This paper examines Igbo personal names from the perspectives of anthropological linguistics, socio-...
Although a lot of scholarly research has been done on Yoruba names, little or no literature exist on...
Reduplication is a product of interference, a major phenomenon in the interlingual study. Lexical Re...
The subject of naming is a universal one (Ajileye and Ajileye, 2003) but it has different importance...