In:Roots of Creole Structures: Weighing the contribution of substrates and superstrates
Edited by Susanne Maria Michaelis
[Creole Language Library 33] 2008
► pp. v–vi
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This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 29 October 2008
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.33.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cll.33.toc
Table of contents
List of contributors
List of standard abbreviationsix
Preface
1. The problem of multiple substrates: The case of Jamaican Creole
2. The superstrate is not always the lexifier: Lingua Franca in the Barbary Coast 1530-1830
3. In praise of the cafeteria principle: Language mixing in Hawai'i Creole
4. Tense marking and inflectional morphology in Indo-Portuguese creoles
5. Vowel epenthesis and creole syllable structure
6. The origin of the Portuguese words in Saramaccan: Implications for sociohistory
7. Encoding path in Mauritian Creole and Bhojpuri: Problems of language contact
8. On the principled nature of the respective contributions of substrate and superstrate languages to a creole's lexicon
9. Valency patterns in Seychelles Creole: Where do they come from?
10. A first step towards the analysis of tone in Santomense
11. Balanta, Guiné-Bissau Creole Portuguese and Portuguese: A comparison of the noun phrase
12. Zamboangueño Chavacano and the potentive mode
13. Between contact and internal development: Towards a multi-layered explanation for the development of the TMA system in the creoles of Suriname
14. The formation of deverbal nouns in Vincentian Creole: Morpho-phonological and morpho-syntactic processes
15. A la recherche du "superstrat": What North American French can and cannot tell us about the input to creolization
Personal name index
Language index
Places and Peoples index
Subject index
