Epidemics and Language Rejuvenation: The Emergence and Use of New English Forms in the Covid-19 Pandemic Nigeria

Author:

Nwosu Onyebuchi1,Inyima Chidimma U. E.1,Dona-Ezenne Immaculate N.2,Ibezim Obinna1,Ugochukwu Ngozi G.1

Affiliation:

1. Alex Ekwueme Federal University , Ndufu-Alike , Nigeria

2. F.C.T. College of Education , Zuba, Abuja , Nigeria

Abstract

Abstract The novel coronavirus (SAR-COV-2) and its attendant respiratory disease, COVID-19, said to have originated in Wuhan, China in December, 2019 has become a global concern with far-reaching impact on all facets of human life. Its impact on the English language can be seen in the emergence of new forms of expressions, extension of the meaning of existing words and the resuscitation of hitherto not commonly used expressions. A number of these innovations and usages affect the English language generally, yet language use is context-bound revealing the cultural realities of its users and their environment so that language at all times exhaustively catalogues the things, events and processes in its environment of use (Carrol, 1966:102). This study adopts the Functionalist Approach to investigate the linguistic impact of COVID-19 discourse on the Nigerian variety of the English language using data from Nairaland, an online Nigerian forum. It establishes that COVID-19 pandemic has informed new Englishes in Nigerian English by way of morphemic coinages, phrasal restructuring, syntactic composition, semantic broadening, lexical resuscitation and acronymic coinages.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Water Science and Technology,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference40 articles.

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2. Adegbija, E. (2004). The domestication of English in Nigeria. In S. Awonusi & E. A. Babalola (Eds.), The Domestication of English in Nigeria: A festschrift in honour of Abiodun Adetugbo (pp. 20-24). Lagos: University of Lagos Press.

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