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A comparative study of medical and health terms with special reference to seSotho sa Leboa and Western teminology

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dc.contributor.advisor Mafela, M. J.
dc.contributor.advisor Mojapelo, Mampaka Lydia
dc.contributor.author Tembane, Seleka Maria
dc.date.accessioned 2020-09-11T13:10:21Z
dc.date.available 2020-09-11T13:10:21Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/26660
dc.description.abstract This study focuses on the comparison of medical and health terms with special reference to Sesotho sa Leboa and Western languages. The study was conducted in the communities of Zebediela, Groblersdal and Marble Hall. From time immemorial, traditional medical and health terms were associated with certain types of diseases and health problems among Africans. With the introduction of Western civilisation, most of the medical and health terms which were used in the past by the Basotho ba Leboa, are no longer in use, as Western languages are regarded as prestige languages compared to the indigenous African languages. This perception led to a shortage of Sesotho sa Leboa documents that explain medical and health terms. The literature review revealed that traditional medicine is used for healing by many communities. Scholars further revealed that Western health terminology is more developed than traditional health terminology. The study uses the qualitative approach to explain concepts, and coding schemes were used to categorise medical and health terms. Ethnographic and historical theories were used to analyse data. The similarities and differences between the Sesotho sa Leboa terms and their Western counterparts were discussed and assessed. The study found that a relationship exists between diseases and the body parts in both Sesotho sa Leboa and Western terminology, and that the diseases were classified according to the affected body parts. The medical terms of both languages have similar and different semantic properties. Most of the differences were brought about by the cultural differences of the two communities. As the Sesotho sa Leboa medical terms are inimitable, the culture specific terms used in this study are discussed in Sesotho sa Leboa rather than in Western terminology. Conversely, as most of the recent outbreaks of diseases are named in Western terminology, they are translated into Sesotho sa Leboa. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (ix, 209 leaves : illustrations, graphs and color photos
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject African traditional medicine en
dc.subject Disease en
dc.subject Disorders en
dc.subject Indigenous knowledge systems en
dc.subject Medical and health terms en
dc.subject Medicine en
dc.subject Sesotho sa Leboa Terminology en
dc.subject Western medicine en
dc.subject Western terminology en
dc.subject Medicinal plants en
dc.subject.ddc 610.14
dc.subject.lcsh Medical terminology en
dc.subject.lcsh Traditional medicine en
dc.subject.lcsh Diseases en
dc.subject.lcsh Social medicine en
dc.subject.lcsh Northern Sotho language -- Etymology en
dc.subject.lcsh English language -- Etymology en
dc.subject.lcsh Language and languages en
dc.subject.lcsh Medicine -- Language en
dc.title A comparative study of medical and health terms with special reference to seSotho sa Leboa and Western teminology en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department African Languages en
dc.description.degree D. Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)


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