International audienceThis is a new contribution to a theory of reiteration in natural languages, with a special focus on creoles. Reiteration is meant to denote any situation where the same form occurs (at least) twice within the boundaries of some linguistic domain. By including two case studies bearing on Hebrew and Breton alongside five chapters on creole languages (Surinam creole, Haitian, Mauritian, São Tomé and Pitchi), this volume brings counterevidence to the claim that reiteration phenomena should be particularly typical of creoles. And by exploring the syntax of reiteration alongside its morphology, the authors are led to challenge the 'iconic' theory of 'reduplication' proposed in several other studies of similar phenomena. This...
Creole languages do not exhibit morphosyntactic features that are specific to them, but they are rel...
Striking differences between Haitian Creole (HC) and its lexifier language, French (FR), concern (in...
Creole languages are typically the linguistic side effects of the creation of global economies based...
International audienceThis is a new contribution to a theory of reiteration in natural languages, wi...
25 pagesInternational audienceThe opening chapter of a collective volume on 'The morphosyntax of rei...
Pichi, an Afro-Caribbean English-lexifier Creole spoken on the island of Bioko, Equatorial Guinea, f...
Repetition or reduplication is a main part of linguistics. It is studied not only in stylistics but ...
International audienceThe present study attempts to determine the origin of two types ofpredicate re...
The article investigates a paradigm case of a borderline phenomenon in linguistic analysis: construc...
This paper argues for a strong distinction between morphological and syntactic processes, as the man...
This paper studies lexical reduplication in São Tomense, a Portuguese-based Creole language. Its cen...
In creole studies the notion of “simplification, ” while all-pervasive, rarely acquires an empirical...
This paper studies lexical reduplication in São Tomense, a Portuguese-based Creole language. Its cen...
This book gives an account of some particular strategies by which French-based creole languages deal...
This paper addresses the problem of the emergence of productive morphology in creole languages on th...
Creole languages do not exhibit morphosyntactic features that are specific to them, but they are rel...
Striking differences between Haitian Creole (HC) and its lexifier language, French (FR), concern (in...
Creole languages are typically the linguistic side effects of the creation of global economies based...
International audienceThis is a new contribution to a theory of reiteration in natural languages, wi...
25 pagesInternational audienceThe opening chapter of a collective volume on 'The morphosyntax of rei...
Pichi, an Afro-Caribbean English-lexifier Creole spoken on the island of Bioko, Equatorial Guinea, f...
Repetition or reduplication is a main part of linguistics. It is studied not only in stylistics but ...
International audienceThe present study attempts to determine the origin of two types ofpredicate re...
The article investigates a paradigm case of a borderline phenomenon in linguistic analysis: construc...
This paper argues for a strong distinction between morphological and syntactic processes, as the man...
This paper studies lexical reduplication in São Tomense, a Portuguese-based Creole language. Its cen...
In creole studies the notion of “simplification, ” while all-pervasive, rarely acquires an empirical...
This paper studies lexical reduplication in São Tomense, a Portuguese-based Creole language. Its cen...
This book gives an account of some particular strategies by which French-based creole languages deal...
This paper addresses the problem of the emergence of productive morphology in creole languages on th...
Creole languages do not exhibit morphosyntactic features that are specific to them, but they are rel...
Striking differences between Haitian Creole (HC) and its lexifier language, French (FR), concern (in...
Creole languages are typically the linguistic side effects of the creation of global economies based...