Talk:Dagbani language

Untitled 30 January 2006
As far as I know, Dagbani also has contrastive vowel length. I think this is worth mentioning in the article.

Untitled 18 March 2010
Dagbani is most definitely *not* mutually intelligible with Moore. The languages are, very roughly, about as similar as German and Danish. It's not hard for a speaker of one to learn the other, but they are unequivocally not mutually intelligible. I lived for years in Northern Ghana and can testify on this point first hand. Kusaal, which I know quite well, is considerably closer to Dagbani than Moore is, but even Kusaasi do not understand Dagbani without actually learning it!

The situation can easily be mistaken by foreigners who are confused by the fact that it's not uncommon for local people to speak several languages well; this does not imply that the languages themselves are mutually intelligible between monoglot speakers.

BTW Dagbani *does* have contrastive vowel length, as the commenter above says, but the contrast has been lost in open syllables, so you have e.g. Dagbani sana "stranger", plural saamba, as against Moore saana, plural saamba, Kusaal saan(a) plural saam(ma)

86.128.160.189 (talk) 20:32, 18 March 2010 (UTC)

Sexism and gender stereotyping.
I have not read the entire paper because I do not have access to that pay wall. However I think the assertion that the language contains "more labels that denigrate and trivialize females than males" is far fetched. I could not find any other source that corroborates that view. —Masssly ✉  11:53, 27 February 2015 (UTC)
 * Now reads: According to the linguist Salifu Nantogma Alhassan, there is evidence to suggest that there are gender-related double-standards in the Dagbani language with "more labels that denigrate and trivialise females than males."


 * "Language and gender: the construction of gender in Dagbanli" (pdf / free online)), was written by Dr. Alhassan's as his Ph.D. thesis paper two years earlier. --The Vintage Feminist (talk) 12:40, 27 February 2015 (UTC)


 * I would agree that there are words that trivialize not only females but both genders but this not a unique case to the Dagbani language as male and female differences in morphology and lexis, and linguistic items in general have been recorded in all languages" as can be seen in Keenan (1989), Gregersen (1988) and Romaine (1999) referenced here by the linguist in his dissertation mostly based on original research "These (data) were collected...and transcribed...during conversations". See Original research.


 * However there are no concrete examples in his thesis whereby these differences suggest any form of denigration or linguistic subordination on a womans personal identity and I'm a native speaker of the language. Many of the observations tended to be based on the linguists' personal biases and this is not surprising. Lakoff (1975) in conducting a simmilar research for instance is believed to have relied heavily on her own impressions and subsequent research came up to challenged many of her assertions. Whiles his/your conclusion is not a generalness, I do not think the word "denigrate" or any of its synonyms deserve a place in the article in that particular context.  —Masssly ✉  12:11, 28 February 2015 (UTC)

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