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E-raamat: Kenyan English: Domains of Use, Forms, and Users' Attitudes

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Oct-2021
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781793641090
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Oct-2021
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781793641090

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Kenyan English: Domains of Use, Forms, and Users' Attitudes focuses on the unique issues that concern language researchers in Kenya and elsewhere. Edited by Martha M. Michieka and Evans Gesura Mecha, the collection examines the English language forms and usages to describe the reality of Kenyan English use. The contributors address questions such as: What are the characteristics that distinguish Kenyan English from other national varieties? How is English taught, and what impact does that kind of teaching have on learner proficiency? What is the place of English in mass media, in politics, in the churches, and in multilingual homes? The contributors, all experienced language practitioners based in Kenya or currently conducting language-related research in Kenya, bring fresh perspectives to the topic at hand and give readers a glance into contexts that have not yet been addressed in this way. They highlight the sociolinguistic reality of the English language in present-day Kenya and raise questions that will prompt further research.
Introduction: Kenyan English or Kenyan Englishes? 1(6)
Evans Gesura Mecha
Martha M. Michieka
1 An Empirical Study of Regional Variations in the Kenyan English Vowel System
7(18)
Peter Nyansera Otieno
2 The Kenyan English Accent: Segmental Features
25(16)
Joshua M. Itumo
Martin C. Njoroge
3 Error or Flavor: An Account of the Lexical, Phrasal, and Syntactic Character of Fossilized Errors in Kenyan English Grammar
41(18)
Ann Hildah Gatakaa Kinyua
4 Teaching English in Kenya: Reforms and Challenges in Early Years Education
59(18)
Benard O. Nyatuka
5 English across the Curriculum in Kenya: The Reality in Primary School Classrooms and Implications on Epistemic Access
77(20)
Peter N. Mose
6 English Language Proficiency among Secondary School Learners in Kenya: A Case of One Kenyan Rural Subcounty
97(16)
Daniel Nyongesa Khaemba
Eucabeth Ong'au-Mong'are
7 Patterns of English Use in Kiswahili-Based Kenyan Mass Media
113(20)
Sarah Marjie
8 The English Language and Media Reporting on Devolution in Rural Kenya
133(16)
Nicholas Anyuor
Omukule Emojong
9 Pulpit English in Kenya: Examples of Mediatized Sermons in Kenya
149(16)
Reuben Kigame
Leonora Anyango
10 The Shadow of English: Multilingual Parents and Language Choice in Urban Kenya
165(16)
Leonora Anyango
Index 181(4)
About the Contributors 185
Martha M. Michieka is professor in the Department of Literature and Language at East Tennessee State University.

Evans Gesura Mecha is senior lecturer of theoretical linguistics at Kisii University.