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Kay Ruth M. Williamson (1935–2005)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2011

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Abstract

Type
African Memoirs
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2010

Kay Ruth M. Williamson was born in Hereford, Britain, on 26 January 1935. She obtained a BA and an MA in English Language and Literature from St Hilda's College, Oxford, in 1956 and 1960 respectively. She completed her PhD in Linguistics at Yale University in 1964. Her area of specialization was Ịjoọ linguistics.

She started her career as a teacher of linguistics in the Department of English, University College, Ibadan, in 1957. She was appointed Professor of Linguistics in the Department of Linguistics and Nigerian Languages, University of Ibadan, in 1972. She moved to the University of Port Harcourt in 1977, first as Director of Studies (Language), and later as Head of Department of Linguistics and African Languages, 1982–4, 1987–9, 1993–5. In 1984–5, she was a Visiting Scholar at the University of Leiden. She was appointed Dean, Graduate School, University of Port Harcourt during 1990–1, and was Visiting Scholar at Wolfson College, Oxford, in 1991. After retiring from active service, she was employed on contract as Professor in the Department of Linguistics and Communication Studies, University of Port Harcourt, in 2000–2. In 2002, she was appointed UNESCO Professor of Cultural Heritage, University of Port Harcourt, a position she held until she died.

She was an active and dependable member of the following academic associations: International Phonetic Association (Life Member), Linguistic Society of America, International African Institute, Linguistic Circle of New York, African Studies Association of the United Kingdom, West African Linguistic Society, Linguistic Association of Nigeria.

Her initial area of research interest was syntax. In fact, her PhD thesis was on the grammar of the Kolokuma dialect of Ịjoọ. But later on she totally abandoned syntax in favour of phonology and historical linguistics. In an interview she granted Professor E. N. Emenanjo and me, when we produced the first festschrift in her honour, she said she was first attracted to syntax under the influence of Noam Chomsky's Syntactic Structures. This interest in syntax, according to her, did not last because ‘syntactic theory changed so fast that it was not possible to keep up with it outside the United States’. Another explanation which she gave for the change in focus in her studies was that a great many Nigerian languages were not properly described – hence the more urgent need to document them systematically, and to produce pedagogical materials in them.

The desire to save minority languages and cultures led her – and close associates like Professors E. J. Alagoa and Otonti Nduka – to institute, through funding from UNICEF and the Rivers State government, the famous Rivers Readers Project to produce primers and readers in 23 languages/dialects of old Rivers State. The project also organized workshops for writers, teachers and speakers of these languages/dialects. It was through these workshops that many people in the Niger Delta area of Nigeria learned how to read and write their own native languages. Although she produced a dictionary and wrote a couple of articles on Igbo, her major interest was to develop the minority and endangered languages of the Niger Delta region.

Williamson's contribution to knowledge is far-ranging; apart from publishing articles and books on almost all the Niger Delta languages, she succeeded in training at least one linguist for each of these languages to continue her good work.

She was a celebrated and committed international scholar who cared much about details of analysis, simplicity and grace of expression. To be supervised by her as a graduate or undergraduate student opened an entirely new world of rewarding life experience.

Three areas are outstanding in her contribution to knowledge. First, she introduced multi-valued features in phonological analysis, especially for consonants. Second, she developed very simple and scientific procedures for linguistic classification of languages with little or no documented past. She also developed a practical orthography manual which has continued to serve as a useful guide for dealing with the peculiar sounds of Nigerian languages. Many Nigerian languages today have excellent and reliable orthographies courtesy of Williamson's manual.

In her later days, she became fascinated by other areas outside mainstream linguistics. Working in collaboration with scientists like the late Charles Bruce Powell, she developed an interest in ethnoscience. She became a collector of living and dead specimens of the flora and fauna of the Niger Delta. With her digital camera, she took photographs of her collections, and used native speakers of the local languages to identify them. She was more interested in their scientific and local names for inclusion in the dictionaries of the local languages which she was writing with a number of other collaborators.

Her main regret would be that she did not live long enough to complete some of the major research projects that she started, the most outstanding being ‘Comparative Ijoid’ and ‘Comparative Igboid’. She entrusted her numerous unfinished projects to some of her close associates, particularly Dr Roger Blench and Dr (Mrs) Chinyere Ohiri-Aniche.

FOR KAY WILLIAMSON FROM HER NEIGHBOUR

For twenty-five years at the University of Port Harcourt, Kay Williamson was my campus neighbour; and I could not have asked for a better one. As I used to tease her sometimes, my only problem with her was the high standards she set in her life; standards which sometimes made lazier and less conscientious fellows like myself a little uneasy. Even this, however, was not really a problem; for she inspired by quiet example rather than by preaching and reproaching.

As her colleagues have told us, Kay was an outstanding, internationally respected linguist. Now all too often, outstanding academics are so immersed in their own research and writing that they have little or no time for colleagues or students. Famous examples abound. For Kay, however, it was never so. Somehow, despite her bodily frailty, she managed to combine enormous research productivity with seemingly limitless concern for junior colleagues and for students at all levels. Whenever I went across to her house, the parlour was full of students reading. To many of them, she was not Professor or even Prof; but simply Mama Kay – a second mother as much as an academic supervisor. Even with senior colleagues in other departments needing advice on linguistic matters, she gave liberally of her expertise. I remember a time when I was trying to teach historians the use of linguistic evidence in historical reconstruction. It got to a point where I seemed to be taking a tutorial from Kay on one day, and regurgitating what I had learned from her to a class of students on the next.

It was hard to get Kay totally off duty. But I was quite lucky in this respect. Both of us had been told by doctors to take evening walks for medical reasons; and whenever she was free from evening tutorials, we tended to go round together. Here, it has to be said that walks with Kay were a mixed blessing. Inside our residential area, she waged a relentless battle against rubbish, picking up dozens of unsavoury bits and pieces and carefully piling them on the nearest dumping heaps. Since I couldn't bring myself to participate in this, I had to stand around rather sheepishly, trying with no great success to look like some kind of supervisor. The great thing was to get her away from the residential area and its rubbish, and either down to our local river or into what is now rather grandly called the Biodiversity Area. Once into these byways, she succumbed to her fascination with unusual birds, animals and plants. To me, her enthusiasm lit up what I would otherwise have seen as a rather dull environment. I came to think that, had she not been drawn into linguistics, she might well have become a great field naturalist.

As two human beings, of course, we could hardly avoid punctuating our walks with at least a little university gossip. Like most of us, Kay was troubled by many aspects of life in the university. But in talking of these things, she always expressed faith in peaceful persuasion rather than protest and confrontation. Although I found it hard to go all the way with her on this, I had to acknowledge that, both in her department and in the university at large, she achieved a great deal by sticking to her gentle ways.

The news of Kay's death was a great shock to those to whom she was near and dear – a shock all the greater for coming just as we were getting ready to celebrate her triumphant return from months abroad in hospital. But I take a little consolation from something I thought I saw in Kay herself. I believe she was well aware that from now on she would be frailer than ever before. I also believe she was someone who could not endure the prospect of a slow decline into infirmity, of being forced to turn from caring for others to being cared for by others. In this situation, I think, she had decided to carry on in top gear, regardless of the risk. And after an eighteen-hour intercontinental journey followed by a family wedding for a cherished niece, that indeed is how she went.

References

A. Books and monographs

Williamson, K. 1965 (2nd edition 1969). A Grammar of the Kolokuma Dialect of Ijo. (West African Language Monographs, 2). London: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Thomas, E. and Williamson, K. (1967) Wordlists of Delta Edo: Epie, Engenni, Degema (Occasional Publication No. 8). Ibadan: Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (ed.) (1968) Ika and Ukwuani (Occasional Publication No. 14). Ibadan: Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. and K., Shimizu (eds) (1968) Benue-Congo Comparative Wordlist, Volume I. Ibadan: West African Linguistic Society.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (ed.) (1972) Igbo-English Dictionary. Benin: Ethiope Publishing Corporation.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (ed.) (1973) Benue-Congo Comparative Wordlist, Volume II. Ibadan: West African Linguistic Society.Google Scholar
Alagoa, E. J. and Williamson, K. (eds) (1981) Ancestral Voices: oral historical traditions from Nembe, Niger Delta (Jos Oral History and Literature Texts, 4). Jos: Department of History, University of Jos.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (ed.) (1983) Orthographies of Nigerian Languages, Manual II. Lagos: National Language Centre, Federal Ministry of Education.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. and Timitimi, A. O. (eds) (1983) Short I.zon-English Dictionary (Delta Series No. 3). Port Harcourt: University of Port Harcourt Press.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1984) Practical Orthography in Nigeria. Ibadan: Heinemann Educational Books.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (ed.) (1985) West African Languages in Education. Vienna: Afro-Pub.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1988) The Pedigree of Nations: historical linguistics in Nigeria (Inaugural lecture delivered at the University of Port Harcourt on Tuesday, 7 April 1987). Port Harcourt: University of Port Harcourt Press.Google Scholar
Egberipou, O. A. and Williamson, K. (1994) Izon Tolumo: Learn Izon. Port Harcourt: Riverside Communications.Google Scholar

B. Articles and chapters

Williamson, K. (1959) ‘The units of an African tone language’, Phonetica 3: 145–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (1962) (Republished by Bobbs-Merrill Reprints 1971) ‘Changes in the marriage system of the Okrika Ijo’, Africa 32 (1): 5360.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (1963) ‘The syntax of verbs of motion in Ijo.’, Journal of African Languages 2: 150–4.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1963) ‘History through linguistics’, Ibadan 17: 1011.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1965) ‘Results from the linguistic questionnaire’, Ibadan 21: 25–8.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1966) ‘The status of /e/ in Onitsha Igbo’, Journal of West African Languages 3 (2): 67–9.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1966) ‘Ijo. dialects in the Polyglotta Africana’, Sierra Leone Language Review 5: 122–33.Google Scholar
Freemann, R. A. and Williamson, K. (1967) ‘Ijo. proverbs’, Research Notes (Ibadan) 1: 111.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1967) ‘Songhai wordlist (Gao dialect)’, Research Notes (Ibadan) 1 (3): 131.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1968) ‘Deep and surface structure in tone languages’, Journal of West African Languages 5 (2): 7781.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1968) ‘Introduction’ to R. E. Bradbury, ‘Comparative Edo wordlists’, Research Notes 1 (4): 14.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1968) ‘Languages of the Niger Delta’, Nigeria Magazine 97: 124–30.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1969) ‘Igbo’ and ‘Ijo’ (Chapters 7 and 8) in Dunstan, E. (ed.), Twelve Nigerian Languages. London: Longmans.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. and Timitimi, A. O. (1970) ‘A note on number symbolism in Ijo.’, African Notes (Ibadan) 5 (3): 916.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) ‘Some food plant names in the Niger Delta’, International Journal of American Linguistics 36: 156–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) ‘The definition of a tone language’, Actes du Xe Congrês International des Linguistes 4: 861–4.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) ‘The generative treatment of downstep’ in ‘Tone in generative phonology’, Research Notes 3 (2–3): 2333.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) ‘Some alternative proposals for the Igbo completive phrase’ in ‘Tone in generative phonology’, Research Notes 3 (2–3): 8390.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1971) ‘The Benue-Congo languages and Ijo.’ in Sebeok, T. A. (ed.), Current Trends in Linguistics, Volume 7, pp. 245306.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1971) ‘Animal names in Ijo’, African Notes (Ibadan) 6 (2): 5361.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1972) ‘Assimilation in Ogbia’, Research Notes 5 (2–3): 15.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1972) ‘Summary of tonal behaviour’, Research Notes 5 (2–3): 93101.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1972) ‘The Nigerian Rivers Readers Project’, Linguistic Reporter 14 (6): 12.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1973) ‘More on nasals and nasalization in Kwa’, Studies in African Linguistics 4: 115–38.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1973) ‘The Lower Niger languages’, Oduma 1 (1): 32–5.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1973) ‘Some reduced vowel harmony systems’, Research Notes 6 (1–3): 145–69.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1975) ‘Metre in Izon funeral dirges’, Oduma 2 (2): 2133.Google Scholar
Maddieson, I. and Williamson, K. (1975) ‘Jarawan Bantu’, African Languages 1: 125–63.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1975) ‘Publishing in local languages’ in ‘Report of the Commonwealth African Book Development Seminar’, Commonwealth Secretariat, London.Google Scholar
Williamson, K.(1976) ‘The Rivers Readers Project in Nigeria’ in Bamgbose, A. (ed.), Mother Tongue Education: the West African experience. London and Paris: Hodder and Stoughton and UNESCO Press.Google Scholar
Ladefoged, P., Williamson, K., Elugbe, B. and Sister A. A. Uwalaka (1976) ‘The stops of Owerri Igbo’, Studies in African Linguistics, Supplement 6, 147–63.Google Scholar
Elugbe, B. and K. Williamson (1977) ‘Reconstructing nasals in Proto-Benue-Kwa’ in Juilland, A. (ed.), Linguistic Studies Offered to Joseph Greenberg. Saratoga, CA: Anma Libri.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1977) ‘Multivalued features for consonants’, Language 53: 843–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (1978) ‘From tone to pitch-accent: the case of Ijo’, Kiabara 1 (2): 116–25.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1979) ‘Consonant distribution in Ijo’ in Polome, E. C. and Winter, W. (eds), Linguistic and Literary Studies Presented to Archibald Hill. Lisse, Netherlands: Peter de Ridder Press.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1979) ‘Medial consonants in Proto-Ijo’, Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 1: 7394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (1979) ‘Small languages in primary education: the Rivers Readers Project as a case history’, African Languages/Langues Africaines 5 (2): 95105.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1979) ‘Sentence tone in some southern Nigerian languages’, Proceedings of the Ninth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences 2: 424–30. Copenhagen: Institute of Phonetics, University of Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1979) The Big Guest (Introduction to three folktales), Kiabara 2 (2):160–3.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1980) ‘Recent progress of the Rivers Readers Project in Nigeria’, Educafrica (Bulletin of the UNESCO Regional Office for Education in Africa) 6: 7682.Google Scholar
Orupabo, G. J. and K. Williamson (1980) ‘Okrika’ in Dakubu, M. E. Kropp (ed.), West African Language Data Sheets, Volume II. Leiden: West African Linguistic Society and African Studies Centre.Google Scholar
Elugbe, B. and K. Williamson (1984) ‘The loss of the fortis/lenis contrast in Abuan resonants’ in Higgs, J. and Thelwall, R. (eds), Topics in Linguistic Phonetics in Honour of E. T. Uldall. Occasional Papers in Linguistics and Language Learning, No. 9. Coleraine and Jordanstown: Linguistics Department, New University of Ulster.Google Scholar
Faraclas, N. and Williamson, K. (1984) ‘Assimilation, dissimilation and fusion, vowel quality in Lower Cross’, Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 6: 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (1984) ‘A note on the word bekee,Uwa ndi. Igbo 1: 102.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1985) ‘How to become a Kwa language’ in Makkai, A. and Melby, A. K. (eds), Linguistics and Philosophy: essays in honor of Rulon Wells. (Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, No. 42). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1986) ‘The Igbo associative and specific constructions’ in Bogers, K., van der Hulst, H. and Mous, M. (eds), The Phonological Representation of Suprasegmentals. Dordrecht: Foris Publications.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1986) ‘Niger-Congo: SVO or SOV?’, Journal of West African Languages 16 (1): 515.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1987) ‘Nasality in Ijo’ in Odden, David (ed.), Current Trends in African Linguistics.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (1988) ‘Linguistic evidence for the prehistory of the Niger Delta’ in Alagoa, E. J. et al. (eds), The Prehistory of the Niger Delta. Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1989) ‘Niger-Congo overview’ in Bendor-Samuel, J. (ed.), Niger-Congo Languages. Lanham MD: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1989) ‘Benue-Congo overview’ in Bendor-Samuel, J. (ed.), Niger-Congo Languages. Lanham MD: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1989) ‘Tone and accent in Ijo’ in van der Hulst, Harry and Smith, N. (eds), Pitch Accent Systems. Dordrecht: Foris Publications.Google Scholar
Efere, E. E. and K. Williamson (1989) ‘Languages [of Rivers State]’ in Alagoa, E. J. and Tamuno, T. N. (eds), Land and People of Nigeria: Rivers State. Port Harcourt: Riverside Communications.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1990) ‘Development of minority languages: publishing problems and prospects’ in E. N. Emenanjo (ed.), Multilingualism, Minority Languages and Language Policy in Nigeria. Agbor: Central Books Ltd in collaboration with the Linguistic Association of Nigeria. Also published in 1993 as Chapter 13 of Bello, S. and Augi, A. R. (eds), Culture and the Book Industry in Nigeria. Lagos: National Commission for Arts and Culture.Google Scholar
Lee, J. D. and Williamson, K. (1990) ‘A lexicostatistic classification of Ijo. dialects’, Research in African Languages and Linguistics 1 (1): 110.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1990) ‘Transcription in Nigerian languages’ in Alagoa, E. J. (ed.), Oral Tradition and Oral History in Africa and the Diaspora: theory and practice. Lagos: Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilization for Nigerian Association for Oral History and Tradition.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1991) ‘The tense system of Izon’ in Essien, O. E. (ed.), The Tense Systems of Nigerian Languages and English. Afrikanistische Arbeitspapiere (AAP).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1992) ‘R. C. Abraham and D. Alagoma: their contribution to Igbo studies’, African Languages and Cultures, Supplement 1: 131–40.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. and E. N. Emenanjo (1992) ‘Igbo’ in Bright, W. (ed.), International Encyclopedia of Linguistics.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1992) ‘Some Bantu roots in a wider context’ in Ebermann, E., Sommerauer, E. R. and Thomanek, K. E. (eds), Komparative Afrikanistik: sprach-, geschichts- und literaturwissenschaftliche Aufsätze zu Ehren von Hans G. Mukarovsky anlässlich seines 70 Geburtstags. Vienna: Afro-Pub, pp. 387403.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1993) ‘Linguistic evidence for the use of some tree and tuber food plants in southern Nigeria’ in Shaw, T. et al. (eds), The Archaeology of Africa: food, metals and towns. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1993) ‘Reading, writing and publishing in small languages’ in Aziza, R. O. and Emenanjo, E. N. (eds), Teaching Nigerian Languages: experiences from the Delta. Warri: COEWA Publishers.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1993) ‘The noun prefixes of New Benue-Congo’, Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 14: 2945.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (1993) ‘Introduction [to orthographic practice in Nigeria]’ in Rhonda, L. Hartell (ed.), Alphabets of Africa. Dakar: UNESCO and SIL.Google Scholar
Blench, R. M., Williamson, K. and Connell, B. (1994) ‘The diffusion of maize in Nigeria’, Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika 15: 946.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1997) ‘Western African languages in historical perspective’ in Vogel, J. O. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Precolonial Africa, pp. 171–7.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1998) ‘Defaka revisited’ in Ejituwu, N. C. (ed.), The Multi-Disciplinary Approach to African History. Port Harcourt: University of Port Harcourt Press.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1999) Chapter 2 in The Development of the University of Port Harcourt 1977–1998. Port Harcourt: University of Port Harcourt Press.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1999) ‘Distinctive features’. Appendix to Shirley Yul-Ifode, A Course in Phonology. Port Harcourt: Riverside Communications.Google Scholar
Efere, E. E. and Williamson, K. (1999) ‘Languages [of Bayelsa State]’, in The Land and People of Bayelsa State: Central Niger Delta. Port Harcourt: Onyoma Research Publications.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (2000) ‘Did chickens go west?’ in Blench, R. M. and MacDonald, K. C. (eds), The Origins and Development of African Livestock. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. and R., Blench (2000) ‘Niger-Congo’ in Heine, B. and Nurse, D. (eds), African Languages: an introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (2000) ‘Towards reconstructing Niger-Congo’ in Wolff, H. Ekkehard and Gensler, O. (eds), Proceedings of the Second World Congress of African Linguistics. Köln: Rudiger Koppe Verlag.Google Scholar
Ndimele, O.-M. and Williamson, K. (2002) ‘Languages [of Rivers State]’, The Land and People of Rivers State: Eastern Niger Delta, Chapter 9. Port Harcourt: Onyoma Research Publications.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (2003) ‘Charles Bruce Powell, 1943–1998’, Crustaceana 75 (10): 1275–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, K. (2003) ‘Low tone roots in Igboid’ in O.-M. Ndimele (ed.), In the Linguistic Paradise: a Festschrift for E. 'Nolue Emenanjo. Aba: National Institute for Nigerian Languages.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (2004) ‘Typical vowel systems and processes in West African Niger-Congo languages’, Journal of West African Languages 30 (2): 127–42.Google Scholar

C. Reviews

Williamson, K. (1964) Review of: A. Martinet, Elements of General Linguistics. Journal of West African Education 8 (3): 89191.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1978) Review of: Hans Mukarovsky, A Study of Western Nigritic. 2 vols. Kiabara 1 (1): 32–9.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1982) Review of: Herault, G. (ed.), Atlas des langues Kwa de Côte d'Ivoire (Tome 1: Monographies). Journal of West African Languages 14 (1): 105–8.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1984) Review of: P. Akujuobi Nwachukwu, Towards an Igbo Literary Standard. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies.Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (Forthcoming) Review of: Capo, H. C., A Comparative Phonology of Gbe. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies.Google Scholar

D. Practical booklets

Williamson, K. and Egberipou, O. A. (1966) (Second edition, revised, 1967, third edition 1968) ‘The sound system and spelling of Ijo’. Department of Linguistics and Nigerian Languages, University of Ibadan (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Egberipou, O. A. and Williamson, K. (1968) ‘Bolou Izon egberi fun: Ijo. tales, Book 1’. Occasional Publication No. 15, Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan.Google Scholar
Egberipou, O. A. (1969) ‘Bolou Izon go fun: Ijo Reader 1’. Department of Adult Education, University of Ibadan, and Rivers State Government.Google Scholar
Egberipou, O. A. (1969) ‘Teachers' notes on Bolou I.zo.n go fun’. Department of Adult Education, University of Ibadan (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) ‘Teachers' notes on Okwukwo ke mbom nu Ikwere’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) (Second impression 1973, third impression 1980). ‘Reading and writing Ikwere’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) ‘Reading and writing Nembe’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) ‘Reading and writing Epie’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1970) (Second edition, 1973) ‘Reading and writing Echie’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1972) ‘Reading and writing Kalabari’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1972) ‘Reading and writing Ogbia’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1972) ‘Reading and writing Okrika’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1972) ‘Reading and writing Ogbah’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1973) ‘Reading and writing Eleme’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1974) ‘Reading and writing Egbema’. Rivers Readers Project, Ibadan and Port Harcourt (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Williamson, K. (1991) ‘Reading and writing Egnih (Ogbah)’ [‘Reading and writing Ogbah’-see above-as revised by the Egnih Ogbah Language Committee]. Rivers Readers Project, Port Harcourt.Google Scholar
Abangwo, D. S. (1996) ‘A guide to reading and writing Degema’ (Fourth edition, revised by Okpara, D. S., Kari, E. E. and Williamson, K.). Rivers Readers Project, Port Harcourt.Google Scholar

E. Editorship of journals

1. Guest Editor, special issue of Kiabara on Nigerian languages. Kiabara 2 (2) (1979).Google Scholar

F. Essays in honour of Kay Williamson

Emenanjo, E. N., and O.-M., Ndimele (ed.) (1995) Issues in African Languages and Linguistics: essays in honour of Kay Williamson. Aba: National Institute for Nigerian Languages.Google Scholar
Ndimele, O.-M. (ed.) (2003) Four Decades in the Study of Languages and Linguistics in Nigeria: a festschrift for Kay Williamson. Aba: National Institute for Nigerian Languages.Google Scholar