In:Creoles, Contact, and Language Change: Linguistic and social implications
Edited by Geneviève Escure and Armin Schwegler
[Creole Language Library 27] 2004
► pp. v–vi
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 13 October 2004
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.27.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.27.toc
Table of contents
Preface
1. The origins of Macanese reduplication
2. Court records as a source of authentic early Sranan
3. Garifuna in Belize and Honduras
4. The Nova Scotia–Sierra Leone connection: New evidence on an early variety of African American Vernacular English in the diaspora
5. The development of variable NP plural agreement in a restructured African variety of Portuguese
6. Second language acquisition in creole genesis: The role of processability
7. OT and the acquisition of Jamaican syllable structure
8. Double-object constructions in two French-based creoles (Morisyen and Seselwa)
9. Passive voice in Papiamento: A corpus-based study on dialectal variability
10. Tone assignment on lexical items of English and African origin in Krio
11. TMA and the St. Lucian Creole verb phrase
12. The Limonese calypso as an identity marker
13. The speech event kuutu in the Eastern Maroon community
14. Reflexivity in French-based creoles
15. The role of style and identity in the development of Hawaiian Creole
Index
