English in kenya

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By: Felipe De la Garza English in Kenya

description

English dialect in Kenya Swahili and English

Transcript of English in kenya

Page 1: English in kenya

By: Felipe De la Garza

English in Kenya

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Kenya• Capital & largest city:

Nairobi

• Population (2013 estimate): 44,037,656 (31st)

• Independence from Great Britain December 12, 1963

• Official languages: Swahili, English

• Spoken languages: 69

• Literacy rate: 85%

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Indigenous languages

English is usually second-language in Kenya, therefore the way it is spoken (pronunciation, phonetics and grammar) depends on the structure of the mother language of the

speaker 60+

Indigenous languages are usually divided into:

•Niger-Congo

•Cushitic/Sudanic

•Afro-Asiatic

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Kiswahili• Originates in Eastern African

coast

• Bantu language with Persian & Arabic influence

• Muslim commercial route

• 1000a.d.

• 1884-1885 Berlin congress

• 1895 British protectorate

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Kiswahili• Mombasa original capital

• Spoke Kiswahili

• British colonizers learned swahili to control people

• 1907 Capital moved to Nairobi (less swahili influence)

• Inland there are more languages

• Missionaries spread 🙏

Kiswahili among tribes as a mother tongue

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Kiswahili

• Most of the languages of southern and eastern Africa are closely related and belong to the Bantu family within Niger-Congo.

• Many of these are tone languages that also contain numerous affixes.

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English

• The mother tongue of individual African speakers affects their accent strongly

• double pronouns, such as "me myself, I don't know," or "we, ourselves".

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English Accent

• Problems with /r/ and /l/

• Nasal sounds

• Vowels

• Diphthongs

• lamb ram, face dress, mouth moth, Show so, beat bit

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English Today

• Lyrics are most often in Swahili and English

• English is widely spoken in commerce, schooling and government

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Sheng

• Sheng is a Swahili-based mixed language

• originating among the urban underclass of Nairobi, Kenya,

• influenced by many of the languages spoken there.

• earthwire -> neck tie

• shower -> rain

• pack -> live (somewhere)

• dame, shore (sho-reh; from "shawty") -> girl, chick

• Sasa?" (How are you now?), to which the reply might be "Fit sana", where "fit" comes from English t "sana" means "very" in Swahili.

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Bibliography

• East African English - Hermann Ingi Ragnarsson

• http://mariefahy.blogspot.com/2011/05/kenyan-english.html

• http://www.theguardian.com/education/2012/oct/16/kenya-debates-language-identity