| dc.description.abstract | Loan adaptation in language contact situations occurs when a language borrows words
or expressions from another language and modifies them to fit the phonological,
morphological, or syntactic norms of the borrowing language. The adapted forms
might affect the vitality of the receiving language. In this perspective, this study
focused on the morphophonological adaptation of Lukabras verbs borrowed from
English language and sought to establish the effects of these borrowed verbs on the
vitality of Lukabras language. The specific objectives of the study were; to examine
the morphophonological processes involved in the adaptation of Lukabras loan verbs
from English language, to establish the morphophonological constraints that govern
the adaptation of Lukabras loan verbs from English language and to establish the
effects of English language loan verbs on Lukabras linguistic vitality. The study was
informed by the Optimality Theory by Prince and Smolensky and Ethnolinguistic
Vitality Theory. Optimality Theory was used to analyse the morphophonological
processes and constraints involved in the adaptation of Lukabras loan verbs while the
Ethnolinguistic Vitality Theory accounted for the vitality of Lukabras language during
borrowing. Ethnolinguistic vitality theory provided the tenets that were used to
measure the vitality of Lukabras language. The study adopted a descriptive research
design with qualitative research approach focusing on Lukabras borrowed verbs from
English. The verbs were derived from native speakers located in Kakamega North Sub
County. Kakamega North Sub- County is multilingual where people speak Lukabras,
English and Kiswahili languages. The study employed purposive sampling procedure
to arrive at fourteen (14) Lukabras native speakers as respondents and 150 borrowed
verbs as the units of analysis. Through systematic sampling, 50 lexical items were
picked from the 150 borrowed verbs for analysis. Focus Group Discussions, and In
depth interviews were used to collect data. Content analysis also used to describe the
data by identifying themes that emerged from the findings. The study established that
Lukabras and English morpho-phonology differ and the borrowed English loan verbs
are morphologically adapted in Lukabras through morpho-phonological processes
such as prefixation, suffixation, vowel epenthesis, deletion, reduction, consonant
devoicing, substitution and deletion. The study also revealed that the
morphophonological constraints that governed the nativization of the English loan
verbs in Lukabras are; COMPLEX, NOCODA, MAX IO, ONSET, DEP IO, IDENT
IO, ALGHN (left edge) and PEAK. The loan verbs from English had also added to
Lukabras vocabulary thus increasing its vitality. It is hoped that the findings of this
study will contribute to the existing literature on Bantu languages in relation to
borrowing. | en_US |