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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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39 |
Arctic origin and domestic development of Chinook Jargon
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Abstract:
It is entirely appropriate that Chinook Jargon was included in a conference on Arctic pidgins even though its linguistic form has little to do with the Arctic. Furthermore, the Chinook were not themselves Arctic people but lived at the end of the eighteenth century (and into the nineteenth century, of course) at the mouth of the Columbia River in what is today the state of Washington.
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Keyword:
Chinook jargon; Language contact
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/67624 https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110813302.321
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