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Multilingualism: the case for a new research focus
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Paulin Djité
Published/Copyright:
September 15, 2009
Abstract
We have been taught and have taught for decades, that language is not set in concrete, that it is not immutable, that it is in constant flux and that it changes over time and space. Yet, when it comes to multilingualism, the focus seems to be solely on the threats to its diversity and maintenance, rather than on its ever-changing dynamics.
This article aims to offer an analytical perspective on multilingualism as an evolving process, with new language combinations within individual language repertoires and the language profiles of speech communities and polities across generations and around the world.
Published Online: 2009-09-15
Published in Print: 2009-September
© 2009 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
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Articles in the same Issue
- Multilingualism: the case for a new research focus
- Language politics and policy in the United States: implications for the immigration debate
- Polish Canadians and Polish immigrants in Canada: self-identity and language attitude
- Languages in the Canton of Grisons
- Campus English: lexical variations in Cameroon
- Codeswitching and ethnicity: grammatical types of codeswitching in the Afrikaans speech community
- Book reviews
- Is there an educational advantage to speaking Irish? An investigation of the relationship between education and ability to speak Irish