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The status of Sango in fact and fiction: on the one-hundredth anniversary of its conception
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23 |
Review of The Sango language and its lexicon (Sêndâ-yângâ tî sängö), by Christina Thornell
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Review of: Mobilian jargon: Linguistic and sociohistorical aspects of a Native American Pidgin, by Samuel J. Drechsel
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Review of Sociolinguistique urbaine: la vie des langues à Ziguinchor (Sénégal), by Caroline Juillard
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Review of Sociolinguistic theory: Linguistic variation and its social significance, by Jack Chambers
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38 |
Review of Language attitudes in Sub-Saharan Africa: A sociolinguistic overview, by Efurosibina Adegbija
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40 |
C’est passionnant d’être passionné
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Abstract:
This work is under copyright: the publisher should be contacted for permission to re-use or reprint this material in any form. ; My wife tells me, without any antipathy to linguistics, that I should have been a chef de cuisine or an interior decorator. Yes, I might have enjoyed being one or the other, but they were not what I had considered in my youth. The first careers were suggested to me by my father, when I was still in primary or junior high school: becoming a physician or lawyer. But when I was just fifteen years old, I chose to go into some type of Christian ministry.
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/67137 https://doi.org/10.1075/sihols.88.11sam
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