In:Spanish in Contact: Policy, Social and Linguistic Inquiries
Edited by Kim Potowski and Richard Cameron
[IMPACT: Studies in Language, Culture and Society 22] 2007
► pp. v–viii
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Published online: 16 July 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/impact.22.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/impact.22.toc
Table of contents
Introduction
Part I. Heritage Spanish in the United States1
1. Subjects in early dual language development: A case study of a Spanish-English bilingual child
2. Interpreting mood distinctions in Spanish as a heritage language
3. Anglicismos en el léxico disponible de los adolescentes hispanos de Chicago
Part II. Education and policy issues59
4. Teaching Spanish in the U.S.: Beyond the one-size-fits-all paradigm
5. The politics of English and Spanish aquí y allá
6. Language attitudes and the lexical de-Castilianization of Valencian: Implications for language planning
7. Are Galicians bound to diglossia? An analysis of the nature, uses and values of standard Galician
Part III. Pragmatics and contact133
8. Addressing peers in a Spanish-English bilingual classroom
9. Style variation in Spanish as a heritage language: A study of discourse particles in academic and non-academic registers
10. “Baby I'm Sorry, te juro, I'm Sorry”: Subjetivización versus objetivización mediante el cambio de códigos inglés/español en la letra de una canción de bachata actual
11. Cross-linguistic influence of the Cuzco Quechua epistemic system on Andean Spanish
12. La negación en la frontera domínico-haitiana: Variantes y usos (socio)lingüísticos
Part IV. Variation and contact235
13. On the development of contact varieties: The case of Andean Spanish
14. Linguistic and social predictors of copula use in Galician Spanish
15. Apuntes preliminares sobre el contacto lingüístico y dialectal en el uso pronominal del español en Nueva York
16. Is the past really the past in narrative discourse?
17. The impact of linguistic constraints on the expression of futurity in the Spanish of New York Colombians
18. Quantitative evidence for contact-induced accommodation: Shifts in /s/ reduction patterns in Salvadoran Spanish in Houston
19. Está muy diferente a como era antes: Ser and Estar + Adjective in New Mexico Spanish
Part V. Bozal Spanish355
20. Where and how does bozal Spanish survive?
21. The appearance and use of bozal language in Cuban and Brazilian neo-African literature
Index
