Urban Contact Dialects and Language Change
Urban Contact Dialects and Language Change
Insights from the Global North and South
Wiese, Heike; Kerswill, Paul
Taylor & Francis Ltd
03/2022
350
Dura
Inglês
9781138596092
15 a 20 dias
598
PART A: MULTILINGUAL SOCIETAL HABITUS
Chapter 1: Cameroon: Camfranglais, by Roland Kiessling
Chapter 2: Democratic Republic of the Congo: Lingala ya Bayankee/Yanke, by Nico Nassenstein
Chapter 3: Senegal: Urban Wolof then and now, by Fiona Mc Laughlin
Chapter 4: South Africa: Tsotsitaal and urban vernacular forms of South African languages, by Ellen Hurst-Harosh
Chapter 5: Ghana: Ghanaian Student Pidgin English, by Dorothy Pokua Agyepong and Nana Aba Appiah Amfo
Chapter 6: Kenya: Sheng and Engsh, by Maarten Mous and Sandra Barasa
Chapter 7: Finland: Old Helsinki slang, by Heini Lehtonen and Heikki Paunonen
Commentaries:
Chapter 8: Baby steps in decolonising linguistics: Urban language research, by Miriam Meyerhoff
Chapter 9: Variation, complexity and the richness of urban contact dialects, by Joseph Salmons
PART B: MONOLINGUAL SOCIETAL HABITUS
Chapter 10: Tanzania: Lugha ya Mitaani, by Uta Reuster-Jahn and Roland Kiessling
Chapter 11: Denmark: Danish urban contact dialects, by Pia Quist
Chapter 12: Norway: Contemporary urban speech styles, by Bente A. Svendsen
Chapter 13: The Netherlands: Urban contact dialects, by Frans Hinskens, Khalid Mourigh and Pieter Muysken
Chapter 14: Sweden: Suburban Swedish, by Johan Gross and Sally Boyd
Chapter 15: France: Youth vernaculars in Paris and surroundings, by Francoise Gadet
Chapter 16: United Kingdom: Multicultural London English, by Paul Kerswill
Chapter 17: Germany: Kiezdeutsch, by Yazguel Simsek and Heike Wiese
Commentaries:
Chapter 18: Ethnolects, multiethnolects and urban contact dialects: Looking forward, looking back, looking around, by David Britain
Chapter 19: Migrants and urban contact sociolinguistics in Africa and Europe, by Rajend Mesthrie
PART A: MULTILINGUAL SOCIETAL HABITUS
Chapter 1: Cameroon: Camfranglais, by Roland Kiessling
Chapter 2: Democratic Republic of the Congo: Lingala ya Bayankee/Yanke, by Nico Nassenstein
Chapter 3: Senegal: Urban Wolof then and now, by Fiona Mc Laughlin
Chapter 4: South Africa: Tsotsitaal and urban vernacular forms of South African languages, by Ellen Hurst-Harosh
Chapter 5: Ghana: Ghanaian Student Pidgin English, by Dorothy Pokua Agyepong and Nana Aba Appiah Amfo
Chapter 6: Kenya: Sheng and Engsh, by Maarten Mous and Sandra Barasa
Chapter 7: Finland: Old Helsinki slang, by Heini Lehtonen and Heikki Paunonen
Commentaries:
Chapter 8: Baby steps in decolonising linguistics: Urban language research, by Miriam Meyerhoff
Chapter 9: Variation, complexity and the richness of urban contact dialects, by Joseph Salmons
PART B: MONOLINGUAL SOCIETAL HABITUS
Chapter 10: Tanzania: Lugha ya Mitaani, by Uta Reuster-Jahn and Roland Kiessling
Chapter 11: Denmark: Danish urban contact dialects, by Pia Quist
Chapter 12: Norway: Contemporary urban speech styles, by Bente A. Svendsen
Chapter 13: The Netherlands: Urban contact dialects, by Frans Hinskens, Khalid Mourigh and Pieter Muysken
Chapter 14: Sweden: Suburban Swedish, by Johan Gross and Sally Boyd
Chapter 15: France: Youth vernaculars in Paris and surroundings, by Francoise Gadet
Chapter 16: United Kingdom: Multicultural London English, by Paul Kerswill
Chapter 17: Germany: Kiezdeutsch, by Yazguel Simsek and Heike Wiese
Commentaries:
Chapter 18: Ethnolects, multiethnolects and urban contact dialects: Looking forward, looking back, looking around, by David Britain
Chapter 19: Migrants and urban contact sociolinguistics in Africa and Europe, by Rajend Mesthrie