
Creoles, their Substrates, and Language Typology
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Content
- Creoles, their Substrates, and Language Typology
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- The problem of the typological classification of creoles
- 1. The problem
- 2. Aims and limitations of this chapter
- 3. Overview of the results
- 4. Creoles and language typology
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Creoles spoken in Africa and in the Caribbean
- Èdó influence on Santome
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Verb serialisation
- 3. Summary
- 4. Conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- A Wolof trace in the verbal system of the Portuguese Creole of Santiago Island (Cape Verde)
- 1 Santiago in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
- 2. Research on the contribution of African languages to the development of Santiago Creole
- 3. The trace of the Wolof 'situative' in the progressive of the Santiago Creole
- Conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Substrate influences in Kriyol
- 1. Introduction
- 2. A historical and sociolinguistic sketch
- 3. Kriyol compared to its lexifiers and its substrate
- 4. Conclusion: Trying to answer one more question
- List of abbreviations
- References
- One substrate, two creoles
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Some background
- 3. Comparison of the vowel systems
- 4. Comparison of the consonant systems
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Substrate features in the properties of verbs in three Atlantic creoles
- 1. Introduction
- 2. body-state expressions
- 3. weather verbs
- 4. Object to subject raising verbs
- 5. The selectional properties of verbs meaning 'to want'
- 6. The selectional properties of verbs meaning 'to promise'
- 7. The selectional properties of verbs meaning 'to ask' or 'to request'
- 8. Double object verbs
- 9. Serial verbs
- 10. Conclusion
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Assessing the nature and role of substrate influence in the formation and development of the creoles of Suriname
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methodology and data for the study
- 3. Impact of substrate influence on TMA in the creoles of Suriname
- 4. Nature of substrate influence
- 5. The interaction between substrate influence and other sources
- 6. Conclusion
- List of abbreviations
- References
- African substratal influence on the counterfactual in Belizean Creole
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The sociolinguistic background
- 3. The counterfactual in Belize
- 4. African sources of the Belizean counterfactual
- 5. Garifuna reinforcement
- 6. Overview of African substrate influence
- 7. Conclusion
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Substrate features in Nicaraguan, Providence and San Andrés Creole Englishes
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methodology
- 3. Substrate influence in the language structure of SA, PR and NK
- 4. Conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Palenque(ro)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Origins of the Palenqueros: Language-external evidence
- 3. Origins of Palenqueros: Linking language-external evidence with language-internal clues
- 4. Conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Creoles spoken in Asia
- Convergence-to-substratum and the passives in Singapore English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The give and kena passives
- 3. The English passives
- 4. Excursion: Already and also
- 5. Concluding remarks
- References
- Tone in Singlish
- 1. Ecology and scholarship of Singlish
- 2. Tone in Singlish
- 3. Tone me55?
- 4. Tone from Sinitic?
- 5. Final reflections
- List of abbreviations
- References
- The Cantonese substrate in China Coast Pidgin
- 0. Introduction
- 1. Contexts of formation
- 2. Previous scholarship
- 3. Grammar
- 4. Conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Substrate influences in Mindanao Chabacano
- 1. Philippine Creole Spanish and MC
- 2. The origins of Mindanao Chabacano varieties: Endogenous or otherwise?
- 3. On the documentation of Zam
- 4. Philippine languages in contact with Zam - which and when?
- 5. Just what do we mean by a substrate?
- 6. "Substrate" Philippine features in Zam
- 7. Substratal features in segmental (and canonical) phonology
- 8. Copulas and negation, including the copula amo
- 9. Personal pronouns
- 10. Items of "local" lexicon in Cotabato Chabacano
- 11. Conclusions and a glimpse into the future
- Abbreviations
- References
- Negation in Ternate Chabacano
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The current situation and a historical overview
- 3. Negation in Ternate Chabacano
- 4. Conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Aspect and directionality in Kupang Malay serial verb constructions
- 1. Sociolinguistic profile
- 2. Serial verbs in Kupang Malay (general)
- 3. The use of /ame/ and /buang/ in serial verb constructions
- 4. Parallels in surrounding languages
- 5. Summary
- List of abbreviations (for Jacob-Grimes Kupang SVCs)
- References
- Sri Lanka Malay and its Lankan adstrates
- 1. Background
- 2. Previous scholarship and methodology
- 3. SLM grammar
- 4. Genesis of SLM and the role of the adstrates
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Dravidian features in the Sri Lankan Malay verb
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The language
- 3. Morphosyntax
- 4. The primacy of Shonam
- 5. Conclusion
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Creoles spoken in the Pacific
- Papuan Malay of New Guinea
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Verbal complexification: Inflectional morphology
- 3. More marking of aspect: Serial verb constructions
- 4. Serial verb constructions
- 5. Clause linkage
- 6. Other clausal restructuring
- 7. Conclusion
- List of abbreviations
- References
- The influence of Arandic languages on Central Australian Aboriginal English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The CAAE kin relation marker -gether
- 3. Associated Motion in CAAE and Kaytetye
- 4. CAAE prepositions and Kaytetye case
- 5. Summary and conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Roper River Aboriginal language features in Australian Kriol
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Pronouns
- 3. TMA
- 4. Case
- 5. Discussion
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Substrate influences on New South Wales Pidgin
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Transitive marking in Australian Pidgin
- 3. Adjective marking in Australian Pidgin
- 4. Summary and conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Limits of the substrate
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Stable, persistent and ubiquitous Oceanic constructions
- 3. The role of simplification
- 4. Discussion: Simplification and borrowing and the Papuan evidence
- 5. Concluding remarks
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Substrate reinforcement and the retention of Pan-Pacific Pidgin features in modern contact varieties
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Pan-Pacific features
- 3. Substrate languages
- 4. The fate of the nine Pan-Pacific Pidgin features
- 5. Conclusion
- List of abbreviations
- References
- The copula in Hawai'i Creole English and substrate reinforcement
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical issues
- 3. The copula system in modern HCE
- 4. Historical development of the copula system
- 5. Substratal patterns for the creole copula
- 6. Discussion and conclusion
- References
- "On traduit la langue en français"
- 1. Sociohistorical background
- 2. Research into Tayo and the substrate
- 3. Tayo's TMA system
- 4. TMA features of the substrate languages
- 5. Comparing Tayo TMA features and the substrate
- Conclusion
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Conclusion
- Creoles and language typology
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Simplification: Phonology
- 3. Substrate influence
- 4. Superstrate influence
- 5. Relative clauses
- 6. Conclusions
- List of abbreviations
- References
- Index of authors
- Index of languages and language families
- Index of subjects
- The series Typological Studies in Language
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