This research aims to examine the language used by the commuter bus conductors and passengers moving to and from Kejetia bus terminal in the Kumasi Metropolis, Ghana. This research basically focuses on sociolinguistics approach. The source of the data is purely the utterances of the bus conductors and the passengers on board in the commuter buses. Observation and recording were used as the data collection instruments in the study. Both qualitative and quantitative methods were used to analyze the data gathered. The study found Asante Twi dialect as the most dominant language choice of the majority of the sampled population (passengers and drivers' mates). The use of unmarked code switching in conversational discourse was not uncommon among participants. Finally, the study found English language to be the second most dominant language choice in the participants' verbal discourse. The implication is that apart from Akan language, all the other seven languages stand the risk of experiencing language shift leading to eventual language death should the ethnic groups concerned fail to maintain their languages.
CITATION STYLE
Isaac Oduro, Mercy Asantewaa, Olivia Donkor, Francis Kwadwo Kusi, Wilson Oduro, & Felicia Asamoah-Poku. (2020). Language Choice Among Commuter Bus Conductors (Drivers’ Mates) and Passengers at Kumasi Kejetia Bus Terminal, Ghana. Social Education Research, 210–218. https://doi.org/10.37256/ser.122020495
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