![]() The paper has been structured into two main parts. This paper, therefore, investigates the sociolinguistics of the multiplicity of West African Pidgins of Cameroon, Nigeria and Ghana against some sociolinguistic variables of gender, attitudes, code switching, borrowing, slang, and domains of language use. However, nowadays, it has gained status in some communities to the extent that it has become the mother-tongue of such communities. Historically, Pidgin began as a language marked by traditional interference used chiefly by the prosperous and privileged sections of a community, represented by the unskilled and illiterate class of the society (Quirk et al., 1985). One notable phenomenon in the field of language contact is Pidgin English. Language contact is a key issue in the field of sociolinguistics.
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