Abstract
This paper discusses relative clause formation in Akan proverbs and normal sentences with particular attention to their similarities and differences. It explores the comparison of the relative clauses in Akan sentences and other specialized genres such as the proverbs. The paper further analyzes the relative clause occurring in both sentence and proverb structures in order to establish sameness and dichotomy in the syntactic uniqueness in both structures. Purposive sampling technique was employed to select the proverbs for this study. In all, twenty-three (23) proverbs were selected for the study. The study adopted the functional grammar approach in the analysis. The study revealed that the relative clause formation in some Akan proverbs and Akan normal sentences has both overt and covert antecedent noun phrases (ANPs). The headless antecedent noun phrase which is seen as a pronominal also undergoes binary mutation in order to account for the antecedent noun phrase and the relativizer which introduces the relative clause. There are also differences in the syntactic positions of the relative clause more especially the sentence structure type. Finally, there is a difference in the syntactic position of the resumptive pronouns in both structures.
Highlights
The relative clause (R /C) has been examined universally as a linguistic phenomenon and its occurrence is widely manifest in all the human languages in the world
It has been revealed that, with the headless antecedent noun phrases (ANPs), the pronominal undergoes a binary mutation in order to account for the headed noun and the relativizer
Whereas the RES in Akan Normal Sentence occurs in the objective case of the relative verb, that of the Akan Proverb Structure occurs in the subjective case of the relative verb
Summary
The relative clause (R /C) has been examined universally as a linguistic phenomenon and its occurrence is widely manifest in all the human languages in the world. [51] Having examined the relative clause crosslinguistically, it appears much work has been done by some scholars in the English language and some other languages as far as typological study and analysis is concerned [51, 54]. Oduro [41] highlighted relative clause formations in Akan proverbs drawing attention to headless antecedent noun phrase where the antecedent noun phrase appears to be covert in the structure. These revelations have called for comparison of the relative clause formation in both the Akan normal sentence and Akan proverb structure.
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