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Tone in Singlish

Substrate features from Sinitic and Malay
  • Lisa Lim
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Abstract

This paper focuses on aspects of tone in Singlish, the (mesolectal/basilectal) variety of English spoken in Singapore, which take up the claim of tone being a marked feature in contact varieties. While the source of tonal properties may well be the dominant Sinitic substrates, the actual patterning, at both word and phrase level, would appear to actually be a consequence of prosodic patterns found in another, non-tone language substrate, Bazaar/Baba Malay. Such observations support the notion of the founder population in the ecology paradigm: This paper suggests that, as the early English speakers in Singapore, the Peranakans, with Baba Malay as their vernacular, may well have been the community of speakers whose influence on Singlish has been most significant and persistent.

Abstract

This paper focuses on aspects of tone in Singlish, the (mesolectal/basilectal) variety of English spoken in Singapore, which take up the claim of tone being a marked feature in contact varieties. While the source of tonal properties may well be the dominant Sinitic substrates, the actual patterning, at both word and phrase level, would appear to actually be a consequence of prosodic patterns found in another, non-tone language substrate, Bazaar/Baba Malay. Such observations support the notion of the founder population in the ecology paradigm: This paper suggests that, as the early English speakers in Singapore, the Peranakans, with Baba Malay as their vernacular, may well have been the community of speakers whose influence on Singlish has been most significant and persistent.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Preface ix
  4. Introduction
  5. The problem of the typological classification of creoles 3
  6. Creoles spoken in Africa and in the Caribbean
  7. Èdó influence on Santome 37
  8. A Wolof trace in the verbal system of the Portuguese Creole of Santiago Island (Cape Verde) 61
  9. Substrate influences in Kriyol 81
  10. One substrate, two creoles 105
  11. Substrate features in the properties of verbs in three Atlantic creoles 127
  12. Assessing the nature and role of substrate influence in the formation and development of the creoles of Suriname 155
  13. African substratal influence on the counterfactual in Belizean Creole 181
  14. Substrate features in Nicaraguan, Providence and San Andrés Creole Englishes 201
  15. Palenque(ro) 225
  16. Creoles spoken in Asia
  17. Convergence-to-substratum and the passives in Singapore English 253
  18. Tone in Singlish 271
  19. The Cantonese substrate in China Coast Pidgin 289
  20. Substrate influences in Mindanao Chabacano 303
  21. Negation in Ternate Chabacano 325
  22. Aspect and directionality in Kupang Malay serial verb constructions 337
  23. Sri Lanka Malay and its Lankan adstrates 367
  24. Dravidian features in the Sri Lankan Malay verb 383
  25. Creoles spoken in the Pacific
  26. Papuan Malay of New Guinea 413
  27. The influence of Arandic languages on Central Australian Aboriginal English 437
  28. Roper River Aboriginal language features in Australian Kriol 461
  29. Substrate influences on New South Wales Pidgin 489
  30. Limits of the substrate 513
  31. Substrate reinforcement and the retention of Pan-Pacific Pidgin features in modern contact varieties 531
  32. The copula in Hawai‘i Creole English and substrate reinforcement 557
  33. “On traduit la langue en français” 575
  34. Conclusion
  35. Creoles and language typology 599
  36. Index of authors 613
  37. Index of languages and language families 619
  38. Index of subjects 623
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