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A Morphological Classification of Kiswahili

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dc.contributor.author Susan Choge
dc.date.accessioned 2026-02-03T07:37:59Z
dc.date.available 2026-02-03T07:37:59Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.ttu.ac.ke/xmlui/handle/123456789/158
dc.description.abstract Many scholars have classified Kiswahili as a member of Niger-Congo family based on the genealogical classification of Bantu languages. This system determines languages genetic relatedness by use of lexicostatistics (Schadeber, 1986). For years, this classification system has guided linguists and anthropologists to understand, analyse, compare and group languages. It has also aided the understanding of the births and deaths of languages. However, this classification system tells us little about the structural relatedness of genealogically grouped languages. This relatedness is only captured by the Morphological system. Although this system has been in existence since 1800 before the genealogical classification, it has least been used to classify and describe many languages of the world. Few Kiswahili scholars have classified Kiswahili morphologically as agglutinative. However, their classification has not put into consideration other morphological classification types that can be deduced from Kiswahili morphological structure. The objective of this paper therefore, is to do an in-depth morphological classification of Kiswahili based on secondary data collected from two Kiswahili prose texts, namely: “Shamba la Wanyama” (translation of animal farm) and “Siku Njema”. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Dar es Salaam Journal en_US
dc.subject Morphological classification, morphoclass, agglutinative, isolating, polysynthetic, fusional, oligosynthetic en_US
dc.title A Morphological Classification of Kiswahili en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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