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Languages in Contact
The Partial Restructuring of Vernaculars

This 2003 book accounts for the structural differences between non-Creole language varieties and their European source languages.

John Holm (Author)

9780521430517, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 18 December 2003

196 pages, 5 maps 9 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm, 0.46 kg

Review of the hardback: 'A comparative approach to creolistics is nothing new, and Holm is a past master at it, but this work, essential reading for all interested in creolistics, is the first classic (and let us hope, by no means the last) of the new field of comparative semi-creolistics.' Language in Society

There is widespread agreement that certain non-Creole language varieties are structurally quite different from the European languages out of which they grew; however, until recently, linguists have found difficulty in accounting for either their genesis or their synchronic structure. This 2003 study argues that the transmission of source languages from native to non-native speakers led to 'partial restructuring', whereby some of the source languages' morphosyntax was retained, but a significant number of substrate and interlanguage features were also introduced. Comparing languages such as African-American English, Afrikaans and Brazilian Vernacular Portuguese, John Holm identifies the linguistic processes that lead to partial restructuring, bringing into focus a key span on the continuum of contact-induced language change which has not previously been analysed. Informed by the first systematic comparison of the social and linguistic facts in the development of these languages, this book will be welcomed by students of contact linguistics, sociolinguistics and anthropology.

1. Language contact and partial restructuring
2. Social factors in partial restructuring
3. The verb phrase
4. The noun phrase
5. The structure of clauses
6. Conclusions.

Subject Areas: Sociology & anthropology [JH], Sociolinguistics [CFB]

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