RESEARCH


Research Interests

All my research and publication is descriptive and historical comparative work on African languages. My specialty is the Chadic family of languages, spoken in Niger, northern Nigeria, northern Cameroon, and east-central Chad Republic. My concentration has been on languages of the West Branch of Chadic, which are all spoken in northern Nigeria and which include Hausa, the largest natively spoken language in sub-Saharan Africa.

Learn more about Chadic languages and my work on them.

Stimulated by teaching, speaking, and doing research on Hausa since 1965, I study African poetic metrics and music, esp. Hausa poetry and music, but also metrics in the poetry and song of West African languages in general.

Learn more about African poetic metrics and my work on them.

In 2003-2004, for personal interest, I participated in the first year Korean class at UCLA. I found Korean to be one of the most fascinating languages that I ever encountered and have continued studying it.

Learn more about my interests in Korean

Back to top


Fieldwork

Almost all the data for my research comes from fieldwork I have done at various times over the past 35 years. I have worked mainly in northern Nigeria, but also in Niger, Togo, Ghana, and Senegal. I have also spent a fair amount of time working with speakers of African languages in Los Angeles. Most of my field research has been on Chadic languages, but I have done non-trivial amounts of work on Tamazahaq (a Berber language of Niger), Kanuri (a Nilo-Saharan language of Nigeria), Fula (a West Atlantic language spoken across West Africa), Ewe (a "Kwa" language of Togo and Ghana), Avatime (a "Togo remnant" language of Ghana) and Wolof (a West Atlantic language of Senegal and Gambia). Because the Chadic languages are part of the larger Afroasiatic Phylum, I have sought to broaden my knowledge of the phylum by sitting in on classes at UCLA in Arabic, Hebrew, Tigrinya, and Ancient Egyptian.

Back to top


Current Research Projects

Back to top


Lexical databases of Chadic languages

The databases below are in FileMaker Pro 8.5, a cross-platform relational database application. The head entries and examples are all in Unicode, using the AfroRomanU font, sold by Linguists Software).

These files and paper documentation are available free of charge. The files run from 1MB to 3MB each. They are available on CD from

Russell Schuh
Department of Linguistics
UCLA
Los Angeles CA 90095-1543

Back to top