Reversing an African-language lexicon: the <em>Northern Sotho Terminology and Orthography No. 4</em> as a case in point

Original Articles

Reversing an African-language lexicon: the Northern Sotho Terminology and Orthography No. 4 as a case in point

DOI: 10.1080/02572117.2002.10587507
Author(s): DJ Prinsloo Department of African Languages, South Africa , Gilles-Maurice de Schryver Department of African Languages, South Africa

Abstract

The aim of this aiticle is to give a perspective on the required strategies and the potential difficulties involved in reversing a unidirectional bilingual dictionary with an African language as the target language. This will be done by means of a full-scale case study of the (hypothetical) reversal of the Northern Sotho Terminology and Orthography No. 4. It will be pointed out that the African languages do indeed pose unique problems—difficulties that emanate directly from the structure of those languages. It will also be shown that the use of the forward slash causes particular additional complications. The discussion is preceded by an overview of the main issues involved in the compilation of (bidirectional) bilingual dictionaries with the focus on the different types of equivalence relations on the one hand and the reversibility principle on the other.

Get new issue alerts for South African Journal of African Languages