Metanavigation:
Bildmarke
  Max Planck Institute
for Evolutionary Anthropology
Department of Linguistics
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A Reference Grammar of Ọ̀kọ

 

3 teachers in Nigeria

This project is on Ọ̀kọ, the language of the Ogori and Magongo communities of Nigeria. The main objective is to provide a reference grammar of the language.

dancing women in a villageỌ̀kọ is one of the many lesser described languages of Nigeria. Although it is structurally similar to some of its neighboring languages at the syntactic level (e.g. Yoruba), at the morphological level, there are several striking features which separate Ọ̀kọ from others. For example, the process of plural marking on some classes of nouns, the order of nouns and their modifiers, etc.

At the phonological level, several phonological processes are involved in the grammar of the language, such as vowel harmony, the phenomenon of nasal liaison, and more importantly grammatical tones. For example, tones are used to mark negation and are also employed for marking adpositions.

 

Project Members

Joseph Atoyebi