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E-grāmata: Gradual Creolization: Studies celebrating Jacques Arends

Edited by (University of Amsterdam), Edited by (University of Amsterdam), Edited by (Radboud University Nijmegen)
  • Formāts: 404 pages
  • Sērija : Creole Language Library 34
  • Izdošanas datums: 08-Apr-2009
  • Izdevniecība: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789027289360
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  • Formāts: 404 pages
  • Sērija : Creole Language Library 34
  • Izdošanas datums: 08-Apr-2009
  • Izdevniecība: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789027289360
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Is creolization an abrupt or a gradual process? In this volume leading scholars provide both comparative and case studies that outline their working definitions and their views on the particular or average time depth, or key processes necessary for contact language formation, providing a state-of-the art assessment of the theory of gradual creolization. Authors scrutinize the roles of nativization, demography, initial settlement, language composition, koineization, adstrate presence, bilingualism, as well as a variety of structural features in pidgins, creoles and other contact languages world-wide. From Pacific to Atlantic, French-, English-, Dutch-, Portuguese- and other-lexified restructured varieties are covered. Syntactic, lexical, phonological, historical and socio-cultural studies are grouped into Part 1, Linguistic analysis, and Part 2, Social reconstruction. This volume provides the multi-faceted groundwork and expert discussion that will help formulate further a model of gradual creolization, as called for by the work of the late Jacques Arends.
1. Maps;
2. Introductory words;
3. One more cup of coffee: On Gradual
Creolization (by Berg, Margot van den);
4. Jacques Arends' model of gradual
creolization (by Cardoso, Hugo C.);
5. Part
1. Linguistic analysis;
6.
Productive bimorphemic structures and the concept of gradual creolization (by
Baker, Philip);
7. Gradual vs. abrupt creolization and recent changes in
Daman Creole Portuguese (by Clements, J. Clancy);
8. Gradual restructuring in
Ecuadorian Quechua (by Muysken, Pieter);
9. A note on the process of lexical
diffusion in the development of creoles: The case of double-object verbs (by
Lefebvre, Claire);
10. Change in the possessive system of French Caribbean
Creole languages (by Hazael-Massieux, Marie-Christine);
11. The origin and
development of possibility in the creoles of Suriname (by Migge, Bettina);
12. The Saramaccan lexicon: Verbs (by Bakker, Peter);
13. Development of a
creole lexicon (by Huttar, George L.);
14. Gradualism in the transfer of tone
spread rules in Saramaccan (by Kramer, Marvin);
15. In search of a submerged
phonology: The case of early Cape Dutch Pidgin (by Besten, Hans den);
16.
Part
2. Sociohistorical reconstruction;
17. Bilingualism and creolization in
Solomon Islands (by Jourdan, Christine);
18. Lingua Franca in West Africa? An
evaluation of the sociohistorical and metalinguistic evidence (by Huber,
Magnus);
19. The formation of the Portuguese-based Creoles: Gradual or
abrupt? (by Ladhams, John);
20. English-speaking in early Surinam? (by Smith,
Norval);
21. The demographic context of creolization in early English
Jamaica, 1655-1700 (by Kouwenberg, Silvia);
22. The founder principle and
Anguilla's homestead society (by Walicek, Don E.);
23. Demographic factors in
the formation of French Guianese Creole (by Jennings, William);
24. Index