In:Synchronic and Diachronic Perspectives on Contact Languages
Edited by Magnus Huber and Viveka Velupillai
[Creole Language Library 32] 2007
► pp. v–viii
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This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 27 September 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.32.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.32.toc
Table of contents
Preface
Part I
1. Maintenance or assimilation? Phonological variation and change in the realization of /t / by British Barbadians
2. Universal and substrate influence on the phonotactics and syllable structure of Krio
3. Tone on quantifiers in Saramaccan as a transferred feature from Kikongo
4. Morphophonological properties of pitch accents in Jamaican Creole reduplication
5. Effort reduction and the grammar: Liquid phonology in Haitian and St. Lucian
Part II
6. Reflexivity in Capeverdean: Predicate properties and sentence structure
7. An additional pronoun and hierarchies in creolized Chinúk Wawa
8. Three irregular verbs in Gullah
9. Afro-Bolivian Spanish: The survival of a true creole prototype
10. Copula patterns in Hawai‛i Creole: Creole origin and decreolization
Part III
11. On the properties of Papiamentu pa: Synchronic and diachronic perspectives
12. No exception to the rule: The tense-aspect-modality system of Papiamentu reconsidered
13. A look at so in Mauritian Creole: From possessive pronoun to emphatic determiner
14. Chinese Spanish in 19th century Cuba: Documenting sociohistorical context
15. Comparative perspectives on the origins, development and structure of Amazonian (Karipúna) French Creole
Index
