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The cohabitation of three official languages in Post-Genocide Rwanda: Kinyarwanda, English and French


Jacques Lwaboshi Kayigema
Davie E Mutasa

Abstract

In post-genocide Rwanda the rapid rise of English has resulted in a cohabitation of three official languages, thus making the sociolinguistic composition of Rwanda more complex and sociolinguistically enriching. One sociolinguistic result observed in this coexistence of languages is the influx of English and French loanwords in the Kinyarwanda language. Notably, English has risen sharply over the last two decades because of the intent of the Rwandan government to find ways of communicating with the external world in a more powerful language than the previously predominant French. This article therefore aims to highlight factors that led to the spread of English in Rwanda and the contact phenomenon and its ramification that involve English, Kinyarwanda and French.

South African Journal of African Languages 2014, 34(2): 235–245

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eISSN: 2305-1159
print ISSN: 0257-2117