S. Slabbert et C. Myersscotton, THE STRUCTURE OF TSOTSITAAL AND ISCAMTHO - CODE-SWITCHING AND IN-GROUP IDENTITY IN SOUTH-AFRICAN TOWNSHIPS, Linguistics, 35(2), 1997, pp. 317-342
This paper examines the structure of two varieties, Tsotsitaal and Isc
amtho, that are spoken predominantly by males who live in the Black ur
ban townships of South Africa. While many think that Tsotsitaal and Is
camtho lack predictable structure, this paper argues that all versions
follow the same type of morphosyntactic constraints that structure co
de switching as well as playing a part in other language-contact pheno
mena. Data come largely from conversations recorded in Soweto, a major
township outside Johannesburg. As in-group markers, the varieties are
characterized by much slang and lexical variation across versions of
the same variety. Tsotsitaal can be identified as a variety, or set of
versions, with a nonstandard version of Afrikaans as its matrix langu
age, while Iscamtho versions have a South African Bantu language - usu
ally Zulu - as their matrix language. Issues considered include these:
how are Tsotsitaal and Iscamtho similar and different from other lang
uage-contact phenomena; to what extent do their structures support the
matrix-language frame model of Myers-Scotton (1993a)?