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Global patterns of genetic admixture reveal effects of language contact

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Graff A   +8 more
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The Bantu languages : an appraisal

European Journal of Sociology, 1987
The fact that the Bantu languages are related was first mentioned in a short publication by Martin Heinrich Lichtenstein (Berlin) in 1811. Very few Bantu languages were known at that time: only Kongo (Kikongo) as it was spoken at the mouth of the Zaire river, and some languages of southern Africa, on which a few notes were published in theNarrative of ...
openaire   +1 more source

Multilingualism in Bantu languages

Abstract Multilingualism in the Bantu language area is characterized by a complex contact situation involving vernacular languages, lingua francas, the former colonial languages, and globalized English. Social, political, and economic dynamics of the past 200 years have reconfigured the relationships between these four types of ...
Stephanie Rudwick, Rose Marie Beck
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Bantu Languages

2017
Malcolm Guthrie, A. N. Tucker
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Existential constructions in Bantu languages

Abstract This chapter examines existential predication in a sample of one hundred Bantu languages found across the Bantu-speaking region. Following Creissels (2019a), existential constructions are defined in relation to plain locational clauses.
Rasmus Bernander   +2 more
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Language acquisition in Bantu languages

Abstract The resurgence of study in Bantu languages from a cognitive perspective has brought interesting insights to universal language trends as well as language-specific knowledge. This chapter presents contemporary research on the acquisition of Bantu languages belonging to the South Eastern group (spoken in South Africa and ...
openaire   +1 more source

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