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1
The etymology of mbunzú for ‘White-man’ in Sango: Central African history
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2
Une histoire brève de l’origine de la langue sango en Afrique centrale
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3
Sango
In: Contact languages based on languages from Africa, Asia, Australia, and the Americas (Oxford, 2013), p. 13-24
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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4
Versions of Kituba's origin: Historiography and theory
Samarin, William J.. - : De Gruyter, 2013
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5
Jean-Paul Kouega: A dictionary of Cameroon Pidgin English usage [Rezension]
In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole languages. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 24 (2009) 2, 386-387
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6
Making Wawa: The genesis of Chinook Jargon
In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole languages. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 24 (2009) 2, 388-392
OLC Linguistik
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7
Review of A dictionary of Cameroon Pidgin English usage: Pronunciation, grammar and vocabulary, by Jean-Paul Kouega
Samarin, William J.. - : John Benjamins Publishing, 2009
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8
Review of Making Wawa: The genesis of Chinook Jargon, by George Lang
Samarin, William J.. - : John Benjamins Publishing, 2009
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9
A different view of Sango
Samarin, William J.. - : Societe des Africanistes, 2008
Abstract: References omitted by mistake of the editor; to be supplied. Re: Charles Morrill. ; The impoverished République Centrafricaine whose health as a state is attacked from within and without and barely administered with a phantom government is held together by its indigenous language, a lingua franca for most of the population but the first language of a growing number. In this respect it is almost unique on the African continent even when compared with Swahili, Lingala, and Kituba. But like the latter two it owes its existence as a pidginized vehicular language to the spontaneous idioms that arose when Africans from elsewhere arrived with colonization in the nineteenth century and interacted as well as they could linguistically with the people along the banks of the upper Ubangi River. This, at least, is the view that I have expounded during the last two decades, taking care to evaluate other views of the language, all of which are cited below.
Keyword: adverbs; Africa; alienable vs inalienable nouns; argumentation; basic vocabulary; bilingualism; borrowing; Central African Republic; copula; creoles; creolization; creolized Sango; degenerate languages; Dendi language; field linguistics; foreigner talk; foreigner variety; future tense; genetic discontinuity; genetic relationship; glottochronology; grammatical change; grammaticalization; historical linguistics; historiography; history of Sango; jargonize; Jean-Louis Calvet; Language and colonization; Language contact; lexifier; lingua franca; linguistic assistants; linguistic transmission; Marcel Diki-Kidiri; Michael DeGraff; military; mixed vocabulary; mixture in pidgins; mutual intelligibility; Ngbandi language; origin of Sango; Pidgin languages; Pidgin Sango; pidginization; processes of pidginization; progressive aspect; proto-forms; questionnaires; reduplication; restructured language; river trade; Sango language; simplification; slaves; source of Sango; statistical analyses; substrate languages; tense-mood-aspect; Tok Pisin; tone-based grammar; trade; trade networks; typology of languages; Ubangi River; Ubangian trade; vehicular language; vehicularization; verbal system; Yakomas
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/67187
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10
Convergence and the retention of marked consonants in Sango
Samarin, William J.. - : Brill, 2008
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11
The dynamics of Sango language spread
In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole languages. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 22 (2007) 2, 347-366
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12
Review of The dynamics of Sango language spread, by Mark Karan
Samarin, William J.. - : John Benjamins Publishing, 2007
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13
REVIEW ARTICLE - Sentence repetition tests in determining competence in the spread of Pidgin Sango: Mark Karan, The dynamics of Sango language spread
In: Word. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 54 (2003) 2, 217-238
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14
The past and present in marking futurity in Sango
In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole languages. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 16 (2001) 1, 53-106
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15
JOURNAL OF PIDGIN AND CREOLE LANGUAGES 16:1 (2001) - ARTICLES - The past and present in marking futurity in Sango
In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole languages. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 16 (2001) 1, 53-106
OLC Linguistik
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16
Testing hypotheses about African ideophones
In: Ideophones (Amsterdam, 2001), p. 321-337
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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17
Explaining shift to Sango in Bangui
Samarin, William J.. - : Peeters, 2001
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18
Sociolinguistics as I see it
In: Journal of sociolinguistics. - Oxford [u.a.] : Blackwell 4 (2000) 2, 303-311
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19
DIALOGUE - Sociolinguistics as I see it
In: Journal of sociolinguistics. - Oxford [u.a.] : Blackwell 4 (2000) 2, 303-311
OLC Linguistik
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20
The status of Sango in fact and fiction : on the one-hundredth anniversary of its conception
In: Language change and language contact in Pidgins and Creoles (Amsterdam [etc.], 2000), p. 301-333
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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