In:Creoles, their Substrates, and Language Typology
Edited by Claire Lefebvre
[Typological Studies in Language 95] 2011
► pp. 367–382
Sri Lanka Malay and its Lankan adstrates
Published online: 17 February 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.95.21ans
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.95.21ans
Sri Lanka Malay is the vernacular language of the descendants of the Malay-Javanese diaspora of Sri Lanka. It is a restructured variety of Malay, which emerged from the prolonged contact between speakers of Malay varieties and speakers of Sinhala and Tamil varieties. The grammar shows a typological shift from the Austronesian to the Lankan type, a shift that can be explained by the typological pressure that the adstrates Sinhala and Tamil – which are highly congruent – exercise in the trilingual environment. This paper discusses the prevalent grammatical patterns of Sri Lanka Malay in terms of frequency, typological congruence and trilingual admixture. I show that, for a complete understanding of Sri Lanka Malay grammar, we must approach it by taking into full consideration the typological matrix in which it has developed, which includes a Malay-based lexifier and two adstrates, namely Sinhala and Tamil. This argues against a view of Sri Lanka Malay as the product of a bilingual admixture.
Keywords: Aspect, Case, frequency, Sinhala, Sri Lanka Malay, Tamil, Tense, trilingualism, typology
Cited by (4)
Cited by four other publications
Bernaisch, Tobias
Szeto, Pui Yiu, Jackie Yan-ki Lai & Umberto Ansaldo
Lim, Lisa
2016. The art of losing. In Endangered Languages and Languages in Danger [IMPACT: Studies in Language, Culture and Society, 42], ► pp. 283 ff.
[no author supplied]
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