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<title>PRONUNCIATION VARIATION IN IGBO RADIO NEWSCASTING</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1944</link>
<description/>
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<dc:date>2026-04-12T09:18:21Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1945">
<title>PRONUNCIATION VARIATION IN IGBO RADIO NEWSCASTING</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1945</link>
<description>PRONUNCIATION VARIATION IN IGBO RADIO NEWSCASTING
OBIORAH, Kenneth Ekezie
Pronunciation Variation (PV), a situation where a lexical item is articulated differently by&#13;
speakers of a language, is prevalent in Nigerian languages, especially those with&#13;
multiplicity of dialects, including Igbo. Extant studies on PV in Nigeria focus mainly on&#13;
its manifestations in spoken English of Nigerian television newscasters, with little&#13;
attention paid to Igbo radio newscasting. This study was, therefore, designed to investigate&#13;
PV among Igbo radio newscasters, with a view to determining their pronunciation patterns&#13;
and describing the differences.&#13;
Allen Bell’s Audience Design Theory was adopted as the framework, while descriptive&#13;
design was employed. Seven radio stations were purposively selected based on the time&#13;
allotted to Igbo news. They were Broadcasting Corporation of Abia (BCA), Anambra&#13;
Broadcasting Service (ABS), Ebonyi Broadcasting Corporation (EBBC), Enugu State&#13;
Broadcasting Service (ESBS), Bond FM, Radio Nigeria and Orient FM. Forty-two&#13;
recorded news bulletins (six from each radio station) were purposively sampled owing to&#13;
their relevance.The data were subjected to sociolinguistic analysis.&#13;
Pronunciation variation in Igbo newscasting involved these alternating variants: [r] and [l],&#13;
[h] and [r], [h] and [f]. [l] and [n], [r] and [j], [la] and [go], [-ɤi] and [-gɪ]. The variants had&#13;
addressee and auditor effects. [r] recorded addressee effect in EBBC, Orient FM, BCA&#13;
and Bond FM, and auditor effect in ABS, ESBS and Radio Nigeria; while [l] recorded&#13;
addressee effect in ABS and ESBS and auditor effect in Radio Nigeria. [h] manifested&#13;
addressee effect in EBBC, Orient FM, BCA and Bond FM and auditor effect in ABS,&#13;
Radio Nigeria and ESBS; while [r] recorded addressee effect in ABS, ESBS and Radio&#13;
Nigeria and auditor effect in EBBC. [h] had addressee effect in EBBC, Orient FM, BCA,&#13;
Radio Nigeria and Bond FM and auditor effect in ABS and ESBS; whereas [f] recorded&#13;
addressee effect in ABS and ESBS and auditor effect in Radio Nigeria. [n] had addressee&#13;
effect in ABS and auditor effect in ESBS and Radio Nigeria; but [l] had addressee effect&#13;
in Bond FM, Radio Nigeria, BCA, Orient FM, ESBS, EBBC and auditor effect in ABS.&#13;
[r] recorded addressee effect in Bond FM, Radio Nigeria, Orient FM, BCA and EBBC and&#13;
auditor effect in ESBS; while [j] manifested addressee effect in ABS and ESBS and&#13;
auditor effect in EBBC and Radio Nigeria. [-la] manifested addressee effect in all stations&#13;
except ABS; but [-go] manifested addressee effect in ABS and auditor effect in other&#13;
stations, except Bond FM. [-ɤi] recorded addressee effect in all stations; while [-gɪ]&#13;
recorded auditor effect in Radio Nigeria, EBBC, Orient FM, BCA and Bond FM.&#13;
The pronunciation choices of the Igbo radio newscasters manifest addressee and auditor&#13;
effects, favouring the use of the levelled Igbo accent.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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