10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «PIDGINISATION»
Discover the use of
pidginisation in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
pidginisation and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Approaches to Second Language Acquisition
The third version of the sociolinguistic approach that we wish to consider briefly
here is what has been referred to as the 'Acculturation/ Pidginisation Hypothesis'.
It appears that this version grew out of work describing 'the general process of ...
Richard Towell, Roger D. Hawkins,
1994
2
Portraits of the L2 User
Schumann (1978) likened L2 acquisition to pidginisation, and Bickerton's (1981,
1984, 1988) bioprogram hypothesis stressed the importance of U in the formation
of a pidgin, as have many researchers in traditional SLA research. In traditional ...
3
Bilinguality and Bilingualism
This happens in the case of pidginisation. 10.3.5 Pidginisation, creolisation and
decreolisation The processes of pidginisation, creolisation and decreolisation
overlap. Only the first and the last arise out of language-contact phenomena, ...
Josiane F. Hamers, Michel H. A. Blanc,
2000
4
Sociolinguistic Variation and Change
The degree of contact one language community has with another has obvious
implications for linguistic structure in terms of increased complexification as a
result of borrowing, and in terms of linguistic simplification as a result of
pidginisation.
5
Dialect Change: Convergence and Divergence in European Languages
3.2.4 Pidginisation and creolisation The sociocultural settings of Old- or New-
World dialects, on the one hand, and pidgins and creole languages, on the other,
barely overlap. Yet, sociolinguistically, processes resulting in dc or dd and ...
Peter Auer, Frans Hinskens, Paul Kerswill,
2005
6
Historical Linguistics and the Comparative Study of African ...
Chapter 9 Pidginisation and creolisation 9.1 Pidginised and creolised languages
9.2 Bickerton's bio-program 9.3 The role of substrate languages 9.4 Pidginisation
and creolisation rather than pidgins and creoles A simplified variety of a ...
Gerrit Jan Dimmendaal,
2011
7
Routledge Enyclopedia of Language Teaching and Learning
Pidgins are not a rare phenomenon, but the underlying principle of pidginisation
is even more widespread. Pidginisation is a process of linguistic accommodation
in which speakers utilise an innate ability to simplify their language or dialect in ...
Michael Byram, Adelheid Hu,
2013
8
Language Contact and Change in the Austronesian World
The eclecticism is justified by the fact that each offers useful insights into the ways
in which Oceanic languages of Melanesia have diversified. Ross retains the
gradualist bias, however, by rejecting the role of pidginisation in language mixing
, ...
Thomas Edward Dutton, Darrell T. Tryon,
1994
9
A Glossary of Sociolinguistics
Pidgins are languages which have been derived from a source language through
pidginisation. The degree of pidginisation is such that mutual intelligibility with
the source language is impossible or very difficult, and they have achieved a ...
10
Analysis of the Scandinavian Loanwords in the Aldredian ...
Even though these features seem to reflect a certain pidgin character of the
variety which arose from the linguistic contact situation, Hine's (1991: 409) claim
that the model sequence of pidginisation, creolisation and decre- olisation does
not fit ...
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «PIDGINISATION»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
pidginisation is used in the context of the following news items.
Remembering Nigerian Professor of Pidgin Poetry
Prof Kayode spoke of Pidginisation of Western African literature and surprised us by performing Pidgin poems. Prof Kayode, you went so early, ... «The Star, Jan 15»