Background of the study
Code‑switching, or the alternating between languages, is a dynamic and integral aspect of Nigerian digital discourse. On platforms like Facebook and WhatsApp, users frequently blend indigenous languages with English to navigate different social contexts and communicate identity (Ibrahim, 2023). Facebook, with its more public and formal nature, often sees a strategic mix of language use, while WhatsApp, being more personal and conversational, exhibits spontaneous and fluid code‑switching practices. This study appraises the practices of code‑switching across these two platforms, examining how the medium, audience, and context influence linguistic choices. By analyzing interaction patterns in both Facebook posts and WhatsApp messages, the research aims to uncover the underlying motivations and socio-cultural factors that drive these multilingual practices, offering insights into their role in shaping digital communication and identity (Okafor, 2024).
Statement of the problem
Despite the prevalence of code‑switching in Nigerian social media, there is limited research comparing its practice across different platforms such as Facebook and WhatsApp. Existing literature often treats code‑switching as a uniform phenomenon, failing to account for the contextual influences that differentiate its usage in public versus private settings (Chukwu, 2023). This gap hinders a nuanced understanding of how digital environments shape language mixing and its implications for cultural identity and communication efficiency (Ibrahim, 2023).
Objectives of the study
Research questions
Significance of the study
This study is significant as it provides a comparative appraisal of code‑switching practices in Nigerian social media. The findings will inform sociolinguistic theory and digital communication practices by clarifying how platform-specific contexts influence multilingual expression and identity formation (Ibrahim, 2023).
Scope and limitations of the study
The study is limited to Facebook and WhatsApp interactions among Nigerian users; it does not consider other social media platforms or offline code‑switching.
Definitions of terms
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