He attended the Presbyterian Boys' Senior High School which was then known as the Presbyterian Boys' Secondary School at Odumase in the Eastern Region of Ghana. His university education was at the University of London where he graduated in 1966. The thesis he submitted was on "The grammatical units of Ewe : a study of their structure, classes and systems".[2]
Career
He worked at the University of Ghana where he was a professor in Linguistics. He first set up and led the Department of Linguistics at the University of Ghana.[3] He was the Master of Akuafo Hall of the university between 1975 and 1979.[4] His area of interest includes tone and syntax of the Ewe language.
Ansre has been actively involved with Bible Translation work in Ghana and Togo. He was the Technical Advisor to the NYALOTA project to develop the Nyagbo, Tafi and Logba languages in the Volta Region of Ghana into written form.[8] In 2017, he was the Chairman of the joint technical committee of the Bible Society of Ghana and GIILBT to analyze the Bible Translation needs of Ghana.[9] He has been active in the work of the GILLBT especially in the area of translation of the Bible into various West African Languages.[10] This has included the Ewe language, his own language as well as thirteen others.[3]
Gilbert Ansre was named after his father, Gilbert Bansah Ansre who was also a Presbyterian minister and was also a graduate of University of Edinburgh. His mother was Felicia Angelica Ansre (née Nane).[14]
^Okyerefo, Michael Parry Kweku (29 September 2014). "11 - Scottish Missionaries in Ghana. The Forgotten Tribe". In Adogame, Afe; Lawrence, Andrew (eds.). Africa in Scotland, Scotland in Africa: Historical Legacies and Contemporary Hybridities. Leiden: Brill. p. 257. ISBN9789004276901. Retrieved 17 June 2020.