Structure and Variation in Language ContactAna Deumert, Stephanie Durrleman-Tame John Benjamins Publishing, 01.01.2006 - 376 Seiten This volume presents a careful selection of fifteen articles presented at the SPCL meetings in Atlanta, Boston and Hawai'i in 2003 and 2004. The contributions reflect - from various perspectives and using different types of data - on the interplay between structure and variation in contact languages, both synchronically and diachronically. The contributors consider a wide range of languages, including Surinamese creoles, Chinook Jargon, Yiddish, AAVE, Haitian Creole, Afro-Hispanic and Afro-Portuguese varieties, Nigerian Pidgin, Sri Lankan Malay, Papiamentu, and Bahamian Creole English (Hackert). A need to question and test existing claims regarding pidginization/creolization is evident in all contributions, and the authors provide analyses for a variety of grammatical structures: VO-ordering and affixation, agglutination, negation, TMAs, plural marking, the copula, and serial verb constructions. The volume provides ample evidence for the observation that pidgin/creole studies is today a mature subfield of linguistics which is making important contributions to general linguistic theory. |
Inhalt
Introduction | 1 |
Structure | 7 |
The phonetics of tone in Saramaccan | 9 |
Tracing the origin of modality in the creoles of Suriname1 | 29 |
Modeling Creole Genesis | 61 |
The restructuring of tenseaspect systems in creole formation | 85 |
Syntactic properties of negation in Chinook Jargon with a comparison to two source languages | 111 |
Sri Lankan Malay morphosyntax | 135 |
A fresh look at habitual be in AAVE | 203 |
Oral narrative and tense in urban Bahamian Creole English | 225 |
Aspects of variation in educated Nigerian Pidgin | 243 |
A linguistic timecapsule | 263 |
The progressive in the spoken Papiamentu of Aruba | 291 |
Was Haitian ever more like French? | 315 |
The late transfer of serial verb constructions as stylistic variants in Saramaccan creole | 337 |
| 373 | |
Sri Lanka Malay | 159 |
The advantages of a blockagebased etymological dictionary for proven or putative relexified languages | 183 |
Variation | 201 |
The series Creole Language Library | 377 |
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Structure and Variation in Language Contact Ana Deumert,Stephanie Durrleman-Tame Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2006 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
affix African Afro-Portuguese agentive Amsterdam analysis Arends Aruba aspect auxiliary basilectal Bickerton century clauses complement construction context copula creole formation creole genesis Creole Languages creolization DeGraff dialects Dutch elements English examples Fongbe French function Gbe languages German grammar grammaticalization habitual Haitian Haitian Creole high tones ideophones Infl input John Benjamins Lefebvre lexical lexicon lexifier linguistic Lipski Lower Chinook Malay maroon McWhorter mesolect Migge modal morpheme morphology narratives Ndyuka negation negative marker NigP nominal non-serial alternatives noun phrase Papiamentu past inflection pattern phonological Pidgin and Creole Portuguese present preverbal relexification Saramaccan semantic sentence shared object SVCs Sinhala Slavic SLMT Sorbian Spanish speakers Sranan Sranan Tongo Sri Lanka stative structure substrate influence superstrate Suriname syntactic syntax synthetic compounds Table Tamil TBU's tense tense/aspect TMA system Upper Sorbian variation varieties verb verbal Waci Wietz Winford words Xwla Yiddish
