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О ПОВЫШЕНИИ РОЛИ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОГО ЯЗЫКА ... : ON INCREASING THE ROLE OF THE STATE LANGUAGE ...
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Stakeholders' Insights Into Migrant Students’ Experiences in a Thai Public School: A Linguistic Ecological Perspective
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In: ASEAS - Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies ; 14 ; 2 ; 243-266 ; Multicultural Lingual and Multicultural Education (2022)
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"From information to action” means “from encoding to decoding
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In: A quest for an interface between information and action ; https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-03522453 ; A quest for an interface between information and action, Pier F. Morette; Vasileios Basios, Apr 2021, Gaeta, Italy. pp.17-23 (2021)
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ТОЧНОСТЬ И УМЕСТНОСТЬ КАК КАТЕГОРИИ СОВРЕМЕННОЙ ЛИНГВОЭКОЛОГИИ (НА МАТЕРИАЛЕ СОВРЕМЕННЫХ МЕДИА) ... : ACCURA CY AND RELEVANCE AS MODERN LINGUOECOLOGY CATEGORIES (ON THE MATERIAL OF MODERN MEDIA) ...
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International Bilingual Journal of Culture, Anthropology and Linguistics ...
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Mouthings as Semiotic Resources in Signed Language Emergence | Felicia Bisnath ...
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Quantitative Research Methods of Linguistic Niche and Cultural Sustainability
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In: Sustainability ; Volume 13 ; Issue 17 (2021)
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Innovative aspects of the development of linguistic forensic examinations ...
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SCIENTIFIC MODEL OF LINGUOECOLOGY: CURRENT STATE OF THEORY AND PROSPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT: ASPECTS OF FORMATION OF THE NATIONAL RUSSIAN SEGMENT AND INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION ...
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Innovative aspects of the development of linguistic forensic examinations ...
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SCIENTIFIC MODEL OF LINGUOECOLOGY: CURRENT STATE OF THEORY AND PROSPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT: ASPECTS OF FORMATION OF THE NATIONAL RUSSIAN SEGMENT AND INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION ...
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SCIENTIFIC MODEL OF LINGUOECOLOGY: CURRENT STATE OF THEORY AND PROSPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT: ASPECTS OF FORMATION OF THE NATIONAL RUSSIAN SEGMENT AND INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION ...
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The Even Language: Studying, Teaching and Linguistic Ecology Challenges ; Эвенский язык: исследования, преподавание, вызовы лингвоэкологии
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Ecological Properties of Speech in the Communicative Field of Russian As a Foreign Language: New Extension
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Environmental conditions do not predict diversification rates in the Bantu languages. ...
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Rethinking decreolization: Language contact and change in Louisiana Creole ...
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Rethinking decreolization: Language contact and change in Louisiana Creole
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Mayeux, Oliver. - : University of Cambridge, 2019. : Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, 2019. : Peterhouse, 2019
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Abstract:
All languages change. Creoles are no exception. However, do creoles change in the same ways as other languages? Research on language change in creoles has hinged on the notion of decreolization: apparently a ‘special case’ of contact-induced change whereby the creole adverges to the lexifier (Bickerton 1980). Decreolization has been characterized as ‘an insecure notion: insufficiently distinguished from ordinary change processes, possibly conceptually incoherent, and certainly not adequately supported by diachronic investigations to date’ (Patrick 1999:19, see also Aceto 1999, Russell 2015, Siegel 2010). This study tests whether decreolization can truly be distinguished from ‘ordinary’ change processes in non-creole languages and, crucially, brings diachronic corpus data to bear on this major gap in our understanding of language contact, change and creoles. These data are drawn from Louisiana Creole, a critically endangered and under-researched French-lexifier creole. Louisiana Creole is particularly well-suited to a study of decreolization: over the course of its life, it has been in contact with its lexifier (French) and a more distantly related language (English). This allows a comparative study of the outcomes of contact between the creole and its lexifier (i.e. Louisiana Creole-French contact) and a dominant language which is not its lexifier (i.e. Louisiana Creole-English contact). Further, different varieties of Louisiana Creole have had differing levels of contact over their history: the variety spoken along the Bayou Teche is typically described as heavily decreolized as a result of contact with French as well as being heavily influenced by English (Neumann 1985a); the variety spoken along the Mississippi river, from which the former variety developed, has had relatively less contact with French (Klingler 2003a). Additionally, this thesis demonstrates that Louisiana’s long history of racial segregation has significantly impacted the sociolinguistic dynamics in the region, with LC undergoing differing levels of contact with French on either side of the Jim Crow divide. Data on the morphosyntactic, phonological and lexical consequences of language contact are drawn from a purpose-built diachronic corpus containing 19th-century folklore texts, 20th-century language documentation materials as well as a transcribed subsample of some 50 hours of sociolinguistic interviews conducted in early 2017. In addition, a corpus of Facebook data is used analyze the language of the burgeoning online language revitalization community. Ultimately, this thesis finds that contact-induced change in Louisiana Creole does not proceed in a creole-specific fashion. It is therefore argued that language contact and change in creole languages is better characterized through existing theoretical frameworks and not through the creole-specific notion of decreolization. The intention of this thesis is not to dismiss decades of work on decreolization; rather, this thesis demonstrates that work on decreolization can be integrated into a non-creole-specific account of language contact, variation and change and so contribute to our understanding of the universal factors which modulate these phenomena. ; Research funded by a AHRC DTP doctoral studentship.
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Keyword:
corpus linguistics; creole languages; decreolization; endangered languages; historical sociolinguistics; language change; language contact; language revitalization; linguistic ecology; Louisiana; Louisiana Creole; sociolinguistics
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URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/294526 https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.41629
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Environmental conditions do not predict diversification rates in the Bantu languages.
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In: nlmid: 101672560 ; essn: 2405-8440 (2019)
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