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<title>LEXICAL ELABORATION IN NAIJA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1946</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 08:46:00 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T08:46:00Z</dc:date>
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<title>LEXICAL ELABORATION IN NAIJA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1947</link>
<description>LEXICAL ELABORATION IN NAIJA
ONWUEGBUZIA, Emeka Felix
Lexical elaboration, a strategy in which new lexical items are developed, is a manifest&#13;
feature of languages, including Naija. Extant linguistic studies on Naija focused mainly&#13;
on the sociological and attitudinal dimensions, with little attention paid to strategies for&#13;
vocabulary expansion. This study was, therefore, designed to investigate lexical&#13;
elaboration in Naija, with a view to describing its lexical features and morphological&#13;
processes.&#13;
Uche Oyali’s model of Language Elaboration was adopted as the framework, while the&#13;
ethnographic design was employed. Edo and Delta States were purposively selected based&#13;
on prominence of usage of Naija. Four cities were conveniently sampled on account of&#13;
being part of the old Bendel State, known for prominent usage of Naija: Benin (Edo) and&#13;
Sapele, Warri, and Ughelli (Delta). Natural speeches were recorded from 19 participants&#13;
(Benin–6, Sapele–6, Ughelli–4, Warri–3). Additional data were sourced from&#13;
NaijaSyncor project, which comprised a spoken (31-hour long recorded speeches from&#13;
321 participants from 10 cities: [Lagos (Lagos State), Onitsha (Anambra State), Ibadan&#13;
(Oyo State), Benin (Edo State), Abuja (Abuja-FCT), Jos (Plateau State), Kaduna (Kaduna&#13;
State), Port-Harcourt (Rivers State) and Kano (Kano State)] and textual corpora. The data&#13;
were subjected to morphological analysis.&#13;
English, Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Portuguese, Edo, Efik, Urhobo, Kalabari, French, Estako,&#13;
Hindi, Wolof and Batonum are major lexical sources for Naija. Two main lexical features&#13;
were identified: initial non-high prosody and multifunctionality. Initial non-high prosody&#13;
occurs in non-monosyllabic words, while multifunctionality is evident in lexical items&#13;
performing different functions without overt morphological change. Nine morphological&#13;
processes were identified: borrowing/lexification, clipping, blending, affixation,&#13;
reduplication, compounding, conversion, grammaticalisation and acronymisation.&#13;
Lexification results in phonological and semantic changes. Clipping manifests in the&#13;
truncation of the final syllable of the source word but adds an epenthetic vowel if the&#13;
clipped word ends in a closed syllable. Blending selects words from any two lexical&#13;
sourcesː hybrid blends or from one lexical sourceː non-hybrid blends. Twenty-one affixes&#13;
were identified: eighteen suffixes ( [-a], [-e], [-i], [-aly], [-o], [-ed], [-est], [-ful], [-ie], [-&#13;
ing], [-s], [-is], [-ite], [-ito], [-late], [-licious], [-koko] ) and three prefixes ( [dis-], [re-],&#13;
[mis-] ). Twenty of the affixes identified are derivational, one is inflectional. Suffixes&#13;
yield nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs. Prefixes yield verbs. Reduplication operates&#13;
by copying whole or part of a word resulting in intensification or creation of lexical items&#13;
There are two classes of compounds. Class 1 compounds have an initial high, while class&#13;
2 compounds have an initial non-high prosody. Lexical category conversion results in the&#13;
change of word class without any overt morphological change. Words in Naija may&#13;
become grammaticalised, transforming from lexical words to functional words&#13;
grammaticalised (ímPART /ĩ́/ (&lt; ímPro /ím/), mákeAUX /mék/ (&lt; mákeVERB /mék/), tákeAUX /ték/&#13;
(&lt; takeVERB /ték/), conAUX /kɔ̃́/ (&lt; comeVERB / /kɔ̃́m/). Acronymisation manifests in the&#13;
formation of lexical items from acronyms (itk /aǐtǐké/ (&lt; I too know), oyo /ǒwaǐó/ (&lt;on&#13;
your own).&#13;
Lexical elaboration in Naija is driven by morpho-phonological processes which are&#13;
employed to create new words.
</description>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Sep 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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