Review published In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages
Vol. 9:1 (1994) ► pp.187–191
Book review
. A syntactic analysis of Sea Island Creole. Irma Aloyce Ewing Cunningham. [Publication of the American Dialect Society, 75]. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 1992. 180 pp. Paper. $17.00
Reviewed by
Published online: 1 January 1994
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.9.1.28nic
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.9.1.28nic
References (12)
Bailey, Guy; Natalie Maynor; and Patricia Cukor-Avila (eds.) 1991. The emergence of Black English: Text and commentary. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
Bolinger, Dwight. 1989. Intonation and its uses: Melody in grammar and discourse. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Hancock, Ian. 1986. On the classification of Afro-Seminole Creole. Language variety in the South: Perspectives in black and white, ed. by Michael Montgomery and Guy Bailey, 85–101. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.
Jones-Jackson, Patricia. 1978. The status of Gullah: An investigation of convergent processes. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan dissertation.
Lees, Robert. 1960. The grammar of English nominalizations. Bloomington, IN: Research Center in Anthropology, Folklore, and Linguistics.
Nichols, Patricia C. 1976. Linguistic change in Gullah: Sex, age, and mobility. Stanford, CA: Stanford University dissertation.
1983. Black and white speaking in the rural South: Difference in the pronominal system. American Speech 581.303–18.
Rickford, John R. 1980. How does doz disappear? Issues in English Creoles: Papers from the 1975 Hawaii Conferences, ed. by Richard R. Day, 77–96. Heidelberg: Julius Groos Verlag.
