journal of language contact 7 (2014) 250-287
© koninklijke brill nv, leiden, 2014 | doi 10.1163/19552629-00702002
brill.com/jlc
A Comparative Study of Bilingual Verb Phrases in
Ewe-English and Gengbe-French Codeswitching
Evershed Kwasi Amuzu
University of Ghana, Legon
a_evershed@yahoo.com
Abstract
This article describes contact phenomena between two closely related varieties of the
Gbe language cluster Ewe and Gengbe each with a Germanic and a Romance language.
The focus is on a comparison of verb phrases in Ewe-English codeswitching, spoken in
Ghana, and Gengbe-French codeswitching, spoken in Togo. It is the first qualitative
comparative study of this kind although quite a number of local (West African) lan-
guages are in contact with English and French. It finds that because the two varieties
of Gbe are morphosyntactically similar, there are remarkable morphosyntactic simi-
larities between bilingual clauses containing English verbs and those containing
French verbs. English/French verbs with the same transitivity value which assign the
same set of thematic roles to their arguments occur in slots in Ewe/Gengbe-based
clauses where Ewe/Gengbe verbs with those subcategorization features also occur.
The explanation for this pattern, from the perspective of the Matrix Language Frame
model, is that during codeswitching English and French verbs are treated as if they
belong to the class of Ewe and Gengbe verbs which share their subcategorization fea-
tures. Assuming language production to be modular (in the sense of Myers-Scotton
1993, 2002), it is argued that the pattern is illustrative of a kind of composite codeswitch-
ing (Amuzu 2005a, 2010, and in print) by which abstract grammatical information from
one language about verbs from that language—here English or French—is consis-
tently mapped onto surface structure through the grammatical resources of another
language, here Ewe or Gengbe.
Keywords
bilingual verb phrases – composite codeswitching – matrix language – language
production – Ewe
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