05556nam 2200709 450 991045349460332120200520144314.090-272-7076-7(CKB)2550000001182135(EBL)1595195(SSID)ssj0001084676(PQKBManifestationID)11616041(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001084676(PQKBWorkID)11035833(PQKB)11388321(MiAaPQ)EBC1595195(Au-PeEL)EBL1595195(CaPaEBR)ebr10827038(CaONFJC)MIL562161(OCoLC)868283400(EXLCZ)99255000000118213520140107h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrPidgins and Creoles beyond Africa-Europe encounters /edited by Isabelle Buchstaller, Leipzig University ; Anders Holmberg, Newcastle University ; Mohammad Almoaily, Newcastle UniversityAmsterdam :John Benjamins Publishing Company,[2014]©20141 online resource (184 p.)Creole language library,0920-9026 ;v. 47Description based upon print version of record.90-272-5270-X 1-306-30910-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.Pidgins and Creoles beyond Africa-Europe Encounters; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Introduction; References; Ethnohistory of speaking; 1. Introduction; 2. Philology of pidgins and creoles: Linguistic reconstitutions; 3. Ethnohistory of pidgins and creoles: Sociohistorical reconstruction; 4. Historical-sociolinguistic analysis of early attestations; 5. Maritime Polynesian Pidgin in a trilogy of historical-sociolinguistic attestations5.1 Observations on and recordings of "Tahitian" by Johann Reinhold Forster and his son George Forster as part of James Cook's second voyage to the Pacific in 17735.2 Spanish-British verbal exchanges, including four questions, in "Hawaiian" with the Tahitian servant-sailor Matatore in Mexico in 1790; 5.3 Conversations by chief Moehanga in "Māori" with the British military surgeon John Savage on their voyage from New Zealand to England in 1805; 6. Conclusions; Acknowledgments; References; The 'language of Tobi' as presented in Horace Holden's Narrative1. Introduction: Holden and the 'language of Tobi'1.1 Sources on Tobian; 2. Historical background: The holden shipwreck; 3. Attestations of the Tobian language (Ramarih Hatohobei), including Holden's memoir; 3.1 Holden's knowledge of Tobian; 3.2 Major source languages of the pidgin; 3.3 Orthography of the source material; 3.4 Morphology; 3.5 Lexicon; 4. Overall structure: an analysis derived from sample texts; 5. Conclusion: Was Holden's "language of Tobi" a pidgin?; References; Websites; Language variation in Gulf Pidgin Arabic; 1. Introduction; 2. Description of the study2.1 Substrate language-based variation2.2 Length of stay in the Gulf and GPA language variation; 2.3 Methodology; 2.4 Hypotheses; 3. The data; 3.1 Quantification of tokens; 3.2 Informants; 4. Results; 4.1 Variation in definiteness; 4.2 Variation in the use of conjunction markers; 4.3 Variation in the use of the copula; 4.4 Variation in the use of the object and possessive pronouns; 4.5 Variation in agreement; 5. Conclusion; Abbreviations; References; How non-Indo-European is Fanakalo pidgin?; 1. Introduction - origins and history; 2. Salient restructuring in Fanakalo3. Comparing Fanakalo features with those of Atlantic creoles4. More structure: Tense and aspect; 5. Relative clauses; 6. Conclusion; Abbreviations; References; Language change in a multiple contact setting; 1. Introduction; 2. Theoretical background; 3. Methods and data; 4. Multilingualism and language contact in Suriname; 4.1 Historical overview; 4.2 Precolonial contact and creolization; 4.3 The Asian languages of Suriname; 4.4 Sranan and Dutch as lingua francas; 4.5 Data on multilingualism in Suriname; 5. Sarnami: koineization, contact and maintenance; 5.1 Sarnami as a koine5.2 Codeswitching and borrowingEvidence from Arabic-based pidgins, such as Bongor Arabic, Juba Arabic, Pidgin Madame, and Gulf Pidgin Arabic, and from the Arabic-based creole Ki-Nubi, shows that in these varieties verbs often derive from Arabic imperatives. In some of the West European-based pidgins, verbs apparently derive from infinitives in the lexifier. The difference may be explained by the morphology of the verb in the lexifier. In the communicative context of early pidginization, commands are frequent. These are normally expressed by an imperative, but in some languages, the infinitive may function as a directive andCreole Language LibraryPidgin languagesGrammar, HistoricalCreole dialectsGrammarLanguages in contactLinguistic changeElectronic books.Pidgin languagesGrammar, Historical.Creole dialectsGrammar.Languages in contact.Linguistic change.417/.22Buchstaller Isabelle890753MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910453494603321Pidgins and Creoles beyond Africa-Europe encounters2169113UNINA