In:Creole Languages and Linguistic Typology
Edited by Parth Bhatt and Tonjes Veenstra
[Benjamins Current Topics 57] 2013
► pp. 9–45
Creoles are typologically distinct from non-creoles
Published online: 18 December 2013
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.57.02bak
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.57.02bak
In creolist circles, there has been a long-standing debate whether creoles differ structurally from non-creole languages and thus would form a special class of languages with specific typological properties. This debate about the typological status of creole languages has severely suffered from a lack of systematic empirical study. This paper presents for the first time a number of large-scale empirical investigations of the status of creole languages as a typological class on the basis of different and well-balanced samples of creole and non-creole languages. Using statistical modeling (multiple regression) and recently developed computational tools of quantitative typology (phylogenetic trees and networks), this paper provides robust evidence that creoles indeed form a structurally distinguishable subgroup within the world’s languages. The findings thus seriously challenge approaches that hold that creole languages are structurally indistinguishable from non-creole languages.
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