Literary Etymologies of The Ewe Names of Some Fruits

Authors

  • C. R. Amenorvi University of Energy and Natural Resources Sunyani, Ghana.
  • K. Danku Diaba Holy Child College of Education, Takoradi, Ghana.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26437/ajar.v9i1.526

Keywords:

Etymology. ewe names. fruits. literary. onomastics

Abstract

Purpose: This study seeks to employ the theory of literary etymology to investigate the Ewe names of ten fruits.  

Design/Methodology/Approach: A purposive sample of ten descriptive Ewe fruit names was adopted for the study because literary etymology favours descriptive names and ten is large enough for phenomenological studies such as this one. The names were analysed against the nine analytical criteria of literary etymology.

Findings: Findings reveal novel, informative and interesting nuances behind each name and show that conscious reflection rather than random arbitrariness informs the giving of these names.

Research Limitation/ Implication: The theoretical framework of literary etymology employed in investigating the names in this study can only be used to analyse descriptive names, like the ones chosen for this study.

 Practical Implications:  The importance of this study is that it allows one to acquire relevant information such as the history behind the names, evidence-based reflection, creativity, and comprehension of the deep meanings behind these common everyday fruit names that could be taken as ordinary names with nothing worth discovering. Finally, the study demonstrates that literary etymology can be used to examine common nouns such as fruit names.

Social Implications: Findings of this study have shown that even everyday words are loaded with meaning and understanding these deeper meanings will improve our social and communicative skills. 

Originality/Value/ Novelty: This study is but one of the very few that has employed the theory of literary etymology to investigate common names and proves its versatility as a framework to analyse all types of names.

Author Biographies

C. R. Amenorvi, University of Energy and Natural Resources Sunyani, Ghana.

He is a Senior Research Fellow at the Department of Languages and General Studies, University of Energy and Natural Resources Sunyani, Ghana.

K. Danku Diaba, Holy Child College of Education, Takoradi, Ghana.

He is a Lecturer at the Department of Languages, Holy Child Training College of Education, Takoradi, Ghana

References

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Amenorvi, C. R., & Kubi, B. (2022). Literary Etymologies of The Ewe Names of Some Punctuation Marks. Nairobi Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, 6(3).

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Published

2023-04-02

How to Cite

Amenorvi, C. R., & Danku Diaba, K. (2023). Literary Etymologies of The Ewe Names of Some Fruits. AFRICAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED RESEARCH, 9(1), 139–152. https://doi.org/10.26437/ajar.v9i1.526