Is Igbo an endangered language?
-
Herbert Igboanusi
Abstract
Igbo is one of Nigeria's three major languages, with Hausa and Yoruba being the other two. It is spoken by a population of between 20 and 25 million people. Igbo is taught, learnt and examined in Igbo as a first language from the primary school level to the tertiary level of education. Books on diverse subjects (including literary works) have been written in the language. In recent times, however, several developments (such as dwindling interest in the language as a first language, declining population of students who apply to take degree or certificate programmes in the language, non-accreditation of the language by the National Universities Commission (NUC) in some universities, and language attitude problems) have prompted some researchers to associate the Igbo situation with language endangerment. The present study sets out to investigate the true position of the Igbo language with respect to language endangerment.
© Walter de Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- Code switching and the globalisation of popular music: The case of North African rai and rap
- Women talk revisited: Personal disclosures and alignment development
- The sociolinguistic distribution of discourse marker like in preadolescent speech
- Is Igbo an endangered language?
- Book reviews
- Publications received
- Contents Multilingua Volume 25 (2006)
Articles in the same Issue
- Code switching and the globalisation of popular music: The case of North African rai and rap
- Women talk revisited: Personal disclosures and alignment development
- The sociolinguistic distribution of discourse marker like in preadolescent speech
- Is Igbo an endangered language?
- Book reviews
- Publications received
- Contents Multilingua Volume 25 (2006)