05447nam 2200721 a 450 991096627700332120240514051722.01-283-32857-7978661332857190-272-7941-110.1075/cll.1(CKB)2550000000064143(EBL)795709(OCoLC)769341884(SSID)ssj0001101494(PQKBManifestationID)11710948(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001101494(PQKBWorkID)11067557(PQKB)10981097(MiAaPQ)EBC795709(Au-PeEL)EBL795709(CaPaEBR)ebr10509517(DE-B1597)719153(DE-B1597)9789027279415(EXLCZ)99255000000006414319860718d1986 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierSubstrata versus universals in Creole genesis papers from the Amsterdam Creole Workshop, April 1985 /editors, Pieter Muysken, Norval Smith1st ed.Amsterdam ;Philadelphia J. Benjamins19861 online resource (323 pages)Creole language library ;v. 1Description based upon print version of record.90-272-5221-1 Includes bibliographies.SUBSTRATA VERSUS UNIVERSALS IN CREOLE GENESIS; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Preface; Table of contents; Introduction: Problems in the Identification of Substratum Features in the Creole Languages; Who, What, Where and Why?; The contributions to this volume; Synthesis; REFERENCES; The Language Bioprogram Hypothesis: Déjà Vu?; REFERENCES; Creoles and West African Languages: a Case of Mistaken Identity?; NOTES; REFERENCES; Bonnet Blanc et Blanc Bonnet: Adjective-Noun Order, Substratum and Language Universals; 1. The problem and some data; 2. Adjective order in Tok Pisin3. Substratum vs. other explanations 4. Conclusions; NOTES; REFERENCES; Semantic Transparency as a Factor in Creole Genesis; NOTE; REFERENCES; The Domestic Hypothesis, Diffusion and Componentiality. An Account of Atlantic Anglophone Creole Origins; 1. Evidence of a pre-1800 anglophone creole on the Coast; 2. Evidence of long-term British settlement on the Coast; 3. Evidence of domestic unions between Europeans and Africans; 4. Emergence of Creole societies; 5. Role of the grumettoes; 6. Evidence for the age and provenance of Guinea Coast Creole English(1) The nature of the English first heard by Africans (2) The linguistic situation in Guinea encountered by the English speakers; (3) The emergence of creolized English from English and African contact; (4) Its further modification by second-language speakers; (5) Its transmission overseas and the development of the Western creoles; 7. Summary; WORKS CONSULTED; Genesisand Development of the Equative Copula in Sranan; 1. The data; 2. The pronominal origin of copular da; 3. The historical development of the equative copula4. Substrata and universals in the differentiation of the equative category 5. Summary and conclusion; NOTES; APPENDIX: Historical sources used for this study; REFERENCES; The Universalistand Substrate Hypotheses Complement One Another; 1. Why Are We Discussing Only the Universalist and Substrate Hypotheses?; 2. Some High Marks for the Universalist Hypothesis; 3. Is the Substrate Hypothesis All Wrong?; 4. Double Standards regarding Atlantic and Oceanic Pidgins and Creoles?; 5. Couple of Relevant Miscellanea; NOTES; REFERENCES; Universals, Substrata and the Indian Ocean Creoles1. Demography and the evolution of Reu and IdF 2. Agglutination; 3. The predicate marker system in IdF and other Creoles; 4. An example of Indo-Aryan syntactic influence in Mauritian Creole; 5. Concluding remarks; NOTES; ANNEXE 1; BIBLIOGRAPHY; Double Negation and the Genesis of Afrikaans; 1. Preliminary considerations; 2. Afrikaans and other languages once spoken at the Cape; 2.1. Introductory remarks; 2.2. Various views on the development of Afrikaans (Hesseling e.a.); 2.3. The linguistic situation at the Cape from a historical point of view; 2.4. Consequences for research3. Double negation in AfrikaansTwo of the most prominent hypotheses about why the structures of the Creole languages of the Atlantic and the Pacific differ are the universalist and he substrate hypotheses. The universalist hypothesis claims, essentially, that the particular grammatical properties of Creole languages directly reflect universal aspects of the human language capacity, and thus Creole genesis involves, then, the stripping away of the accretions of language history.Creole language library ;1.Creole dialectsCongressesSubstratum (Linguistics)CongressesLinguistic universalsCongressesCreole dialectsSubstratum (Linguistics)Linguistic universals417/.2Muysken Pieter152040Smith Norval156649MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910966277003321Substrata versus universals in Creole genesis4374556UNINA01869nas 2200541-a 450 991089283320332120260218111157.02215-5589(DE-599)ZDB2439085-9(CKB)960239034715(CONSER)---64048065-(MiFhGG)0PMU(DE-599)2439085-9(EXLCZ)9996023903471520751019a19579999 -h- bspatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierRevista de filosofía de la Universidad de Costa RicaSan José, Costa Rica Departamento de Filosofía de la Facultad Central de Ciencias y Letras1 online resourceRefereed/Peer-reviewedPrint version: Revista de filosofía de la Universidad de Costa Rica. 0034-8252 (DLC) 64048065 (OCoLC)1714432 Rev. filos. Univ. Costa RicaPhilosophyPeriodicalsPhilosophyLatin AmericaPeriodicalsPhilosophiePériodiquesPhilosophieAmérique latinePériodiquesPhilosophyfast(OCoLC)fst01060777FILOSOFIAPUBLICACIONES PERIODICASrenibLatin AmericafastPeriodicals.fastPeriodicals.lcgftPhilosophyPhilosophyPhilosophiePhilosophiePhilosophy.FILOSOFIAPUBLICACIONES PERIODICAS.105Universidad de Costa Rica.Departamento de Filosofía.Universidad de Costa Rica.Escuela de Filosofía.JOURNAL9910892833203321exl_impl conversionRevista de filosofía de la Universidad de Costa Rica4231161UNINA