Forum

Developing anatomical terms in an African language

Farai Daniel Madzimbamuto

Abstract


Clinical and technical information imparted in most African languages involves inexact terminology and code switching, so it lacks the explanatory power characterised by the English language. African languages are absent in the tertiary science education environment and forums where African scientists could present scientific material in the medium of African languages. This limits the development of African languages in the scientific domain. There has recently been a trend in several African languages to develop and intellectualise them, especially in the field of medical sciences. The ChiShona language is used to explore the ability of an African language to develop new terminology, to name the vertebral skeleton and describe it scientifically. It uses word compounding to demonstrate terminology development. ChiShona has similarities with several hundred other Bantu languages in East, Central and Southern Africa. Advancing this language can promote similar developments in others, making them more explanatory for the lay public and health professionals.

Author's affiliations

Farai Daniel Madzimbamuto, Department of Anaesthesia and Critical Care Medicine at the University of Botswana School of Medicine, Gaborone, Botswana

Full Text

PDF (126KB) HTML

Keywords

African languages, terminology, anatomy

Cite this article

South African Medical Journal 2012;102(3):132-135.

Article History

Date submitted: 2011-05-21
Date published: 2012-02-23

Article Views

Abstract views: 3199
Full text views: 7165

Comments on this article

*Read our policy for posting comments here