Nigerians’ Attitudes Towards The Imitation Of Received Pronunciation Accent In Nigerians’ News Reading

Using explanatory sequential design of mixed-methods, this research investigated Nigerians’ attitudes towards the imitation of Received Pronunciation accent in Nigerians’ news reading. There have been scarce field-based studies conducted on Nigerians’ attitudes towards English in Nigeria. The few st...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hussaini, Wakkai Hosanna
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.usm.my/60865/1/WAKKAI%20HOSANNA%20HUSSAINI%20-%20TESIS24.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my-usm-ep.60865
record_format uketd_dc
spelling my-usm-ep.608652024-07-25T04:32:09Z Nigerians’ Attitudes Towards The Imitation Of Received Pronunciation Accent In Nigerians’ News Reading 2023-09 Hussaini, Wakkai Hosanna P1-1091 Philology. Linguistics(General) Using explanatory sequential design of mixed-methods, this research investigated Nigerians’ attitudes towards the imitation of Received Pronunciation accent in Nigerians’ news reading. There have been scarce field-based studies conducted on Nigerians’ attitudes towards English in Nigeria. The few studies conducted on the field only looked at Nigerians’ attitudes towards Received Pronunciation without focusing on the Nigerians’ attitudes towards the imitation of Received Pronunciation accent in Nigerians’ news reading. Therefore, the Nigerians’ attitudes towards the imitation of Received Pronunciation accent in Nigerians’ news reading formed the object of this study, with the objective of evaluating both the inter-speaker and intra-speaker attitudes of Nigerians towards it. The questionnaire participants were 236, selected from the class of Nigerian public university lecturers. While the interview participants were 24, 14 drawn from the questionnaire participants and 10 from the Nigerian newsreaders on television. The study was conducted within the theoretical and conceptual frameworks of sociolinguistics and language attitude respectively. From the quantitative data, results showed that participants liked and preferred listening to the imitation of Received Pronunciation by Nigerians in news reading over other English accents used in news reading. Yet, for the sake of their identities, the participants disagreed that they imitate the Nigerian newsreaders’ accent. 2023-09 Thesis http://eprints.usm.my/60865/ http://eprints.usm.my/60865/1/WAKKAI%20HOSANNA%20HUSSAINI%20-%20TESIS24.pdf application/pdf en public phd doctoral Universiti Sains Malaysia Pusat Pengajian Bahasa Literasi & Terjemahan
institution Universiti Sains Malaysia
collection USM Institutional Repository
language English
topic P1-1091 Philology
Linguistics(General)
spellingShingle P1-1091 Philology
Linguistics(General)
Hussaini, Wakkai Hosanna
Nigerians’ Attitudes Towards The Imitation Of Received Pronunciation Accent In Nigerians’ News Reading
description Using explanatory sequential design of mixed-methods, this research investigated Nigerians’ attitudes towards the imitation of Received Pronunciation accent in Nigerians’ news reading. There have been scarce field-based studies conducted on Nigerians’ attitudes towards English in Nigeria. The few studies conducted on the field only looked at Nigerians’ attitudes towards Received Pronunciation without focusing on the Nigerians’ attitudes towards the imitation of Received Pronunciation accent in Nigerians’ news reading. Therefore, the Nigerians’ attitudes towards the imitation of Received Pronunciation accent in Nigerians’ news reading formed the object of this study, with the objective of evaluating both the inter-speaker and intra-speaker attitudes of Nigerians towards it. The questionnaire participants were 236, selected from the class of Nigerian public university lecturers. While the interview participants were 24, 14 drawn from the questionnaire participants and 10 from the Nigerian newsreaders on television. The study was conducted within the theoretical and conceptual frameworks of sociolinguistics and language attitude respectively. From the quantitative data, results showed that participants liked and preferred listening to the imitation of Received Pronunciation by Nigerians in news reading over other English accents used in news reading. Yet, for the sake of their identities, the participants disagreed that they imitate the Nigerian newsreaders’ accent.
format Thesis
qualification_name Doctor of Philosophy (PhD.)
qualification_level Doctorate
author Hussaini, Wakkai Hosanna
author_facet Hussaini, Wakkai Hosanna
author_sort Hussaini, Wakkai Hosanna
title Nigerians’ Attitudes Towards The Imitation Of Received Pronunciation Accent In Nigerians’ News Reading
title_short Nigerians’ Attitudes Towards The Imitation Of Received Pronunciation Accent In Nigerians’ News Reading
title_full Nigerians’ Attitudes Towards The Imitation Of Received Pronunciation Accent In Nigerians’ News Reading
title_fullStr Nigerians’ Attitudes Towards The Imitation Of Received Pronunciation Accent In Nigerians’ News Reading
title_full_unstemmed Nigerians’ Attitudes Towards The Imitation Of Received Pronunciation Accent In Nigerians’ News Reading
title_sort nigerians’ attitudes towards the imitation of received pronunciation accent in nigerians’ news reading
granting_institution Universiti Sains Malaysia
granting_department Pusat Pengajian Bahasa Literasi & Terjemahan
publishDate 2023
url http://eprints.usm.my/60865/1/WAKKAI%20HOSANNA%20HUSSAINI%20-%20TESIS24.pdf
_version_ 1811772851594723328