Wolof noun classification: the social setting of divergent change
- 1 April 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Language in Society
- Vol. 7 (1) , 37-64
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0047404500005327
Abstract
Ongoing change in Wolof noun classification is traced by comparing nineteenth-century linguistic evidence with modern sociolinguistic data. On the rural scene, the noun class system today displays competing generalizations, associated with different social groups. Upwardly mobile middle-aged men of high caste tend to reduce the system, whereas other speakers tend to elaborate it. The source of both tendencies can be found in Wolof cultural assumptions relating social rank to norms of verbal conduct. In particular, an idea that linguistic ‘error’ can be appropriate for high-ranking persons underlies the reductionist tendencies of upwardly mobile speakers. Although the two tendencies compete on one level, on another they combine to form a more general systemic trend toward the incorporation of social features into Wolof syntax. (Sociolinguistic change, noun classification, norms for performance, ‘appropriate error’, criteria for inference of change; Wolof language of Senegal.)Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sex, covert prestige and linguistic change in the urban British English of NorwichLanguage in Society, 1972
- WEST ATLANTIC: AN INVENTORY OF THE LANGUAGES, THEIR NOUN CLASS SYSTEMS AND CONSONANT ALTERNATIONPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1971
- Les classes nominales en Wolof et les substantifs à initiale nasaleJournal de la Société des Africanistes, 1943