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Pidgins and Creoles : An introduction
Directionality in pidginization and creolization
edited-book
Author(s):
Philip Baker
Publication date
(Print):
1997
Publisher:
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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Author and book information
Book Chapter
Publication date (Print):
1997
Page
: 91
DOI:
10.1075/cll.19.08bak
SO-VID:
5dc481cd-4fd2-43e4-8af6-d4480c691216
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Book chapters
pp. v
Preface and Acknowledgments
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 1
Verb Movement in four Creole Languages
pp. 3
1. The study of pidgin and creole languages
pp. 15
2. The socio-historical background of creoles
pp. 25
3. Pidgins
pp. 35
Notes on Componential Diffusion in the Genesis of the Kabuverdianu Cluster
pp. 35
Jargons, pidgins, creoles, and koines
pp. 41
4. Mixed languages and language intertwining
pp. 53
5. Variation
pp. 63
“High” Kwéyòl
pp. 65
6. Decolonization, language planning and education
pp. 71
A typology of contact languages
pp. 75
7. Creole literature
pp. 87
8. Theories focusing on the European input
pp. 91
Directionality in pidginization and creolization
pp. 99
9. Theories focusing on the non-European input
pp. 103
From Latin to Early Romance
pp. 111
Mixing, leveling, and pidgin/creole development
pp. 111
10.Gradualist and developmental hypotheses
pp. 121
11. Universalist approaches
pp. 123
Speaking of Slavery
pp. 133
The Creole verb
pp. 133
Slave Narratives, Slave Culture, and the Slave Experience
pp. 137
12. Eskimo pidgin
pp. 151
‘Matrix language recognition’ and ‘morphene sorting’ as possible structural strategies in pidgin/creole formation
pp. 153
13. Haitian
pp. 155
Songs, Sermons, and Life Stories
pp. 163
Are Creole Languages “Perfect” Languages?
pp. 165
14. Saramaccan
pp. 173
The Linguistic Value of the Ex-Slave Recordings
pp. 175
The creolization of pidgin morphophonology
pp. 179
15. Shaba Swahili
pp. 191
16. Fa d’Ambu
pp. 191
Representativeness and Reliability of the Ex-Slave Materials, With Special Reference to Wallace Quarterman’s Recording and Transcript
pp. 201
The Origin of the Syntax and Semantics of Property Items in the Surinamese Plantation Creole
pp. 205
17. Papiamento
pp. 213
Is Gullah Decreolizing? A Comparison of a Speech Sample of the 1930s with a Sample of the 1980s
pp. 219
18. Sranan
pp. 219
Saramaccan Creole origins
pp. 231
The Atlantic Creoles and the Language of the Ex-Slave Recordings
pp. 233
19. Berbice Dutch
pp. 235
Variable Concord in Portuguese
pp. 241
Lost in transmission
pp. 247
20. TMA particules and auxiliaries
pp. 249
Liberian Settler English and the Ex-Slave Recordings
pp. 257
Nativization and the genesis of Hawaiian Creole
pp. 259
21. Noun phrases
pp. 265
Creole-like features in the verb system of an Afro-Brazilian variety of Portuguese
pp. 271
22. Reflexives
pp. 275
There’s No Tense Like the Present
pp. 289
23. Serial verbs
pp. 289
The verb phrase in Afrikaans
pp. 301
The Status of Sango in Fact and Fiction. On the one-hundredth anniversary of its conception
pp. 303
24. Fronting
pp. 309
Shaba Swahili
pp. 319
25. Conclusions
pp. 331
26. An annotated list of creoles, pidgins, and mixed languages
pp. 335
Optimality Theory, the Minimal-Word Constraint, and the Historical Sequencing of Substrate Influence in Pidgin/Creole Genesis
pp. 341
The status of Isicamtho, an Nguni-based urban variety of Soweto
pp. 353
The Story ofkomin Nigerian Pidgin English
pp. 373
New light on Eskimo pidgins
pp. 383
Tense and Aspect in Sranan and the Creole Prototype
pp. 395
Reduplication in Ndyuka
pp. 415
Tense-aspect-mood in Principense
pp. 443
Chaos and Creoles. Towards a New Paradigm?
pp. 459
Wh-words and Question Formation in Pidgin/Creole Languages
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