Results 211 to 220 of about 46,645 (268)
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Spanish-Based Creole Languages
2022We offer a global overview of Spanish-based Creoles and the state of the art of the discipline. First, we present what is generally considered “the group” of Spanish-based Creoles. Two Creoles are then discussed in some detail, Palenquero and Papiamentu, providing sketches of their (a) sociolinguistic history and (b) linguistic structure.
Schwegler, Armin +2 more
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Casamancese Creole language structure dataset
2012This web site contains supporting electronic material for the Atlas of Pidgin and Creole Language Structures (APiCS), a publication of Oxford University Press. APiCS shows comparable synchronic data on the grammatical and lexical structures of 76 pidgin and creole languages. The language set contains not only the most widely studied Atlantic and Indian
Quint, Nicolas, Biagui,, Noël-Bernard
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<i>WORD</i>, 2016
The central claim of Enoch Aboh’s book is that creoles combine features of different languages spoken by people involved in their genesis.
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The central claim of Enoch Aboh’s book is that creoles combine features of different languages spoken by people involved in their genesis.
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2010
The Haitian Creole Language is the first book that deals broadly with a language that has too long lived in the shadow of French. With chapters contributed by the leading scholars in the study of Creole, it provides information on this language's history; structure; and use in education, literature, and social interaction.
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The Haitian Creole Language is the first book that deals broadly with a language that has too long lived in the shadow of French. With chapters contributed by the leading scholars in the study of Creole, it provides information on this language's history; structure; and use in education, literature, and social interaction.
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1997
Abstract Pidgin and creole languages used to be referred to as “mixed languages,” but in recent years this term has been abandoned in favor of “contact languages.” The reason for this is perhaps that the term “mixed” suggests hodgepodge, chaos, and lack of norms, whereas not all pidgins and none of the creoles are in fact chaotic ...
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Abstract Pidgin and creole languages used to be referred to as “mixed languages,” but in recent years this term has been abandoned in favor of “contact languages.” The reason for this is perhaps that the term “mixed” suggests hodgepodge, chaos, and lack of norms, whereas not all pidgins and none of the creoles are in fact chaotic ...
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2020
AbstractPidgin and Creole Studies represent a well-established field in linguistics. In the African context, however, the study of pidgins and creoles is still much less advanced. African pidgin and creole (PC) languages fulfill vehicular functions, whereas not all lingua francas in Africa are to be regarded as pidgins and creoles.
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AbstractPidgin and Creole Studies represent a well-established field in linguistics. In the African context, however, the study of pidgins and creoles is still much less advanced. African pidgin and creole (PC) languages fulfill vehicular functions, whereas not all lingua francas in Africa are to be regarded as pidgins and creoles.
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Pidgin Languages and Creole Languages
2004The article discusses research on the sociolinguistics of creole languages focusing on the creole continuum notion and its viability. The paper argues that the evidence shows that this notion is rather problematic and cannot coherently explain language practices in English official Creole communities or other communities where creoles are regularly ...
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Chagossian Creole – Language Snapshot
Chagossian Creole is a French-lexified Indian Ocean creole spoken previously by the indigenous population of the Chagos Archipelago. Between 1965-1973, the British government forcibly displaced the entire population of the archipelago to Mauritius and the Seychelles. While no right of return has been granted, many Chagossians have since migrated to, orJonathan R. Kasstan +3 more
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