Article published In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages
Vol. 8:1 (1993) ► pp.29–80
The Creolization of Dutch
Published online: 1 January 1993
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.8.1.03bru
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.8.1.03bru
The aim of this article is a systematic investigation of certain grammatical aspects of three languages that came about as by-products of colonial expansion of the Dutch during the seventeenth century: Afrikaans, Negerhollands, and Berbice Dutch. The discussion is centered on three grammatical features that have played an important role either in creolis-tics or in theoretical linguistics: TMA-marking, adpositional phrases, and passive constructions. Since seventeenth-century Dutch is the common lexifier, this language is also taken into account in the overall comparison. It is shown that the three languages related to Dutch form a less homogeneous group than do some of the creoles related to English and French. The main conclusion is that while processes at work during creoli-zation do not have to be uniform and may have different outcomes, the social circumstances existing in the different contact situations constitute a significant factor in the development of the emerging contact languages.
Cited by (13)
Cited by 13 other publications
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Parkvall, Mikael & Bart Jacobs
Bakker, Peter
Bakker, Peter
2017. Dutch creoles compared with their lexifier. In Creole Studies – Phylogenetic Approaches, ► pp. 219 ff.
van Sluijs, Robbert
Ackema, Peter & Maaike Schoorlemmer
Ackema, Peter & Maaike Schoorlemmer
Luijks, Carla A.
2000. Review of Rossem & Voort (1996): Die Creol Taal: 250 years of Negerhollands texts. Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 15:1 ► pp. 207 ff.
Ackema, Peter & Ad Neeleman
Plag, Ingo
[no author supplied]
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