The paper gives a short survey of derivational and inflectional morphology in Pidgins and Creoles. Most of these phenomena turn out to ho retentions from substratum structures rather than late borrowings or secondary innovations. This fact points to system-defining structural properties of substratum morphologies as an important factor in Creole genesis. It is argued in favour of a thorough re-evaluation of Creole data on behalf of Natural Morphology
This paper addresses the problem of the emergence of productive morphology in creole languages on th...
The morphosyntactic development of Atlantic creoles, including Krio, an English-based creole in Sier...
For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of...
International audienceCreole languages have long been considered to be morphologically challenged la...
International audienceCreole languages have long been considered to be morphologically challenged la...
It is argued that pidgin and creole languages, despite the fact that they sometimes developed thousa...
Each MMM has a specific topic that forms one of the criteria for the selection of abstracts. The top...
International audienceIn this paper, I show that verbal and nominal functional elements of Gwadloupé...
Since the early twentieth century, creole studies have been concerned with the question of how these...
This dissertation constitutes the first typologically-oriented monograph on morphomes, which is the ...
International audienceThat creole languages resemble each other beyond the diversity of their lexifi...
The approach of Canonical Typology has proved fruitful for investigating a range of problems in synt...
This collection of articles takes up the issue of Contact Morphology raised by David Wilkins in 1996...
It is commonly accepted that the process of pidginization leads to a loss of in-flectional morpholog...
This work has been accepted for publication in a book that it is under copyright. The publisher shou...
This paper addresses the problem of the emergence of productive morphology in creole languages on th...
The morphosyntactic development of Atlantic creoles, including Krio, an English-based creole in Sier...
For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of...
International audienceCreole languages have long been considered to be morphologically challenged la...
International audienceCreole languages have long been considered to be morphologically challenged la...
It is argued that pidgin and creole languages, despite the fact that they sometimes developed thousa...
Each MMM has a specific topic that forms one of the criteria for the selection of abstracts. The top...
International audienceIn this paper, I show that verbal and nominal functional elements of Gwadloupé...
Since the early twentieth century, creole studies have been concerned with the question of how these...
This dissertation constitutes the first typologically-oriented monograph on morphomes, which is the ...
International audienceThat creole languages resemble each other beyond the diversity of their lexifi...
The approach of Canonical Typology has proved fruitful for investigating a range of problems in synt...
This collection of articles takes up the issue of Contact Morphology raised by David Wilkins in 1996...
It is commonly accepted that the process of pidginization leads to a loss of in-flectional morpholog...
This work has been accepted for publication in a book that it is under copyright. The publisher shou...
This paper addresses the problem of the emergence of productive morphology in creole languages on th...
The morphosyntactic development of Atlantic creoles, including Krio, an English-based creole in Sier...
For virtually as long as linguists have studied contact‐induced grammatical change, the borrowing of...