The Routledge Handbook of Language Contact (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Adamou, Evangelia; Matras, Yaron
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The Routledge Handbook of Language Contact (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Adamou, Evangelia; Matras, Yaron
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The Routledge Handbook of Language Contact provides an overview of the state of the art of current research in contact linguistics.
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The Routledge Handbook of Language Contact provides an overview of the state of the art of current research in contact linguistics.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 576
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351109147
- Artikelnr.: 59805662
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 576
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351109147
- Artikelnr.: 59805662
Evangelia Adamou is Senior Researcher at the CNRS (France). She specializes in the analysis of endangered languages with a focus on language contact and bilingualism, combining corpus and experimental methods. Recent publications include: A Corpus-Driven Approach to Language Contact (2016, De Gruyter Mouton) and The Adaptive Bilingual Mind (under contract, Cambridge University Press). Yaron Matras is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Manchester. His research interests include contact linguistics, urban multilingualism, typology, and language documentation. He has worked on dialects of Romani, German, Kurdish, and other languages, and is the founder of the Multilingual Manchester research unit.
Introduction
Evangelia Adamou and Yaron Matras
Part 1. Methods and theoretical approaches
1) Processing multilingual data
Barbara E. Bullock, Almeida Jacqueline Toribio, Jacqueline Serigos, and Gualberto A. Guzman
2) Language contact in the lab
Paola E. Dussias, Judith F. Kroll, Melinda Fricke, and Michael A. Johns
3) A variationist perspective on language contact
Shana Poplack
4) The 4-M model: different routes in production for different morphemes
Janice L. Jake and Carol Myers-Scotton
5) Theoretical approaches to the grammar of codeswitching
Jeff MacSwan
6) Usage-based approaches
Ad Backus
Part 2. Processes and dimensions
7) Social factors
Kofi Yakpo
8) Language contact: pragmatic factors
Peter Auer
9) Cognitive factors of language contact
Kees de Bot and Lars Bulow
10) Typological factors
Felicity Meakins
11) Cross-language contact in the developing grammars of bilingual children
Jennifer Austin
12) First language attrition in the twenty-first century: How continued L1 contact in the digital age fuels language attrition theorizing
Merel Keijzer
Part 3. Outcomes
13) Borrowing
Yaron Matras and Evangelia Adamou
14) Codeswitching and bilinguals' grammars
Rena Torres Cacoullos and Catherine E. Travis
15) Convergence
Björn Wiemer
16) Creoles and pidgins: why the latter are not the ancestors of the former
Salikoko S. Mufwene
17) Mixed Languages
Carmel O'Shannessy
18) Linguistic landscape and urban multilingualism
Carla Bagna, Monica Barni, and Martina Bellinzona
19) Urban youth speech styles in multilingual settings
Margreet Dorleijn, Maarten Kossmann, and Jacomine Nortier
Part 4. Linguistic areas
20) The Balkans
Victor A. Friedman
21) Anatolia
Anaïd Donabedian and Ioanna Sitaridou
22) Language contact in the Asian region
Umberto Ansaldo and Lisa Lim
23) Eastern Polynesia
Mary Walworth
24) Linguistic Melanesia
Antoinette Schapper
25) Language contact in North America
Marianne Mithun
26) Language contact in West Africa
Friederike Lüpke and Rachel Watson
Evangelia Adamou and Yaron Matras
Part 1. Methods and theoretical approaches
1) Processing multilingual data
Barbara E. Bullock, Almeida Jacqueline Toribio, Jacqueline Serigos, and Gualberto A. Guzman
2) Language contact in the lab
Paola E. Dussias, Judith F. Kroll, Melinda Fricke, and Michael A. Johns
3) A variationist perspective on language contact
Shana Poplack
4) The 4-M model: different routes in production for different morphemes
Janice L. Jake and Carol Myers-Scotton
5) Theoretical approaches to the grammar of codeswitching
Jeff MacSwan
6) Usage-based approaches
Ad Backus
Part 2. Processes and dimensions
7) Social factors
Kofi Yakpo
8) Language contact: pragmatic factors
Peter Auer
9) Cognitive factors of language contact
Kees de Bot and Lars Bulow
10) Typological factors
Felicity Meakins
11) Cross-language contact in the developing grammars of bilingual children
Jennifer Austin
12) First language attrition in the twenty-first century: How continued L1 contact in the digital age fuels language attrition theorizing
Merel Keijzer
Part 3. Outcomes
13) Borrowing
Yaron Matras and Evangelia Adamou
14) Codeswitching and bilinguals' grammars
Rena Torres Cacoullos and Catherine E. Travis
15) Convergence
Björn Wiemer
16) Creoles and pidgins: why the latter are not the ancestors of the former
Salikoko S. Mufwene
17) Mixed Languages
Carmel O'Shannessy
18) Linguistic landscape and urban multilingualism
Carla Bagna, Monica Barni, and Martina Bellinzona
19) Urban youth speech styles in multilingual settings
Margreet Dorleijn, Maarten Kossmann, and Jacomine Nortier
Part 4. Linguistic areas
20) The Balkans
Victor A. Friedman
21) Anatolia
Anaïd Donabedian and Ioanna Sitaridou
22) Language contact in the Asian region
Umberto Ansaldo and Lisa Lim
23) Eastern Polynesia
Mary Walworth
24) Linguistic Melanesia
Antoinette Schapper
25) Language contact in North America
Marianne Mithun
26) Language contact in West Africa
Friederike Lüpke and Rachel Watson
Introduction
Evangelia Adamou and Yaron Matras
Part 1. Methods and theoretical approaches
1) Processing multilingual data
Barbara E. Bullock, Almeida Jacqueline Toribio, Jacqueline Serigos, and Gualberto A. Guzman
2) Language contact in the lab
Paola E. Dussias, Judith F. Kroll, Melinda Fricke, and Michael A. Johns
3) A variationist perspective on language contact
Shana Poplack
4) The 4-M model: different routes in production for different morphemes
Janice L. Jake and Carol Myers-Scotton
5) Theoretical approaches to the grammar of codeswitching
Jeff MacSwan
6) Usage-based approaches
Ad Backus
Part 2. Processes and dimensions
7) Social factors
Kofi Yakpo
8) Language contact: pragmatic factors
Peter Auer
9) Cognitive factors of language contact
Kees de Bot and Lars Bulow
10) Typological factors
Felicity Meakins
11) Cross-language contact in the developing grammars of bilingual children
Jennifer Austin
12) First language attrition in the twenty-first century: How continued L1 contact in the digital age fuels language attrition theorizing
Merel Keijzer
Part 3. Outcomes
13) Borrowing
Yaron Matras and Evangelia Adamou
14) Codeswitching and bilinguals' grammars
Rena Torres Cacoullos and Catherine E. Travis
15) Convergence
Björn Wiemer
16) Creoles and pidgins: why the latter are not the ancestors of the former
Salikoko S. Mufwene
17) Mixed Languages
Carmel O'Shannessy
18) Linguistic landscape and urban multilingualism
Carla Bagna, Monica Barni, and Martina Bellinzona
19) Urban youth speech styles in multilingual settings
Margreet Dorleijn, Maarten Kossmann, and Jacomine Nortier
Part 4. Linguistic areas
20) The Balkans
Victor A. Friedman
21) Anatolia
Anaïd Donabedian and Ioanna Sitaridou
22) Language contact in the Asian region
Umberto Ansaldo and Lisa Lim
23) Eastern Polynesia
Mary Walworth
24) Linguistic Melanesia
Antoinette Schapper
25) Language contact in North America
Marianne Mithun
26) Language contact in West Africa
Friederike Lüpke and Rachel Watson
Evangelia Adamou and Yaron Matras
Part 1. Methods and theoretical approaches
1) Processing multilingual data
Barbara E. Bullock, Almeida Jacqueline Toribio, Jacqueline Serigos, and Gualberto A. Guzman
2) Language contact in the lab
Paola E. Dussias, Judith F. Kroll, Melinda Fricke, and Michael A. Johns
3) A variationist perspective on language contact
Shana Poplack
4) The 4-M model: different routes in production for different morphemes
Janice L. Jake and Carol Myers-Scotton
5) Theoretical approaches to the grammar of codeswitching
Jeff MacSwan
6) Usage-based approaches
Ad Backus
Part 2. Processes and dimensions
7) Social factors
Kofi Yakpo
8) Language contact: pragmatic factors
Peter Auer
9) Cognitive factors of language contact
Kees de Bot and Lars Bulow
10) Typological factors
Felicity Meakins
11) Cross-language contact in the developing grammars of bilingual children
Jennifer Austin
12) First language attrition in the twenty-first century: How continued L1 contact in the digital age fuels language attrition theorizing
Merel Keijzer
Part 3. Outcomes
13) Borrowing
Yaron Matras and Evangelia Adamou
14) Codeswitching and bilinguals' grammars
Rena Torres Cacoullos and Catherine E. Travis
15) Convergence
Björn Wiemer
16) Creoles and pidgins: why the latter are not the ancestors of the former
Salikoko S. Mufwene
17) Mixed Languages
Carmel O'Shannessy
18) Linguistic landscape and urban multilingualism
Carla Bagna, Monica Barni, and Martina Bellinzona
19) Urban youth speech styles in multilingual settings
Margreet Dorleijn, Maarten Kossmann, and Jacomine Nortier
Part 4. Linguistic areas
20) The Balkans
Victor A. Friedman
21) Anatolia
Anaïd Donabedian and Ioanna Sitaridou
22) Language contact in the Asian region
Umberto Ansaldo and Lisa Lim
23) Eastern Polynesia
Mary Walworth
24) Linguistic Melanesia
Antoinette Schapper
25) Language contact in North America
Marianne Mithun
26) Language contact in West Africa
Friederike Lüpke and Rachel Watson