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The role of tone and rhyme structure in the organisation of grammatical morphemes in Tobagonian
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Winford James
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Table of Contents V
- Preface VII
- Introduction IX
-
Section 1: Segments and syllables
- Markedness, faithfulness and creolization: The retention of the unmarked 3
- A new look at nasalization in Haitian Creole 25
- Two types of R deletion in Haitian Creole 43
- Rules vs. analogy: Modeling variation in word-final epenthesis in Sranan 71
- New evidence from the past: To epenthesize or not to epenthesize? That is the question 91
- Syllabic structure and creolization in Saotomense 109
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Section 2: Stress, tone and intonation
- The accentual system of Haitian Creole: The role of transfer and markedness values 123
- African American English suprasegmentals: Α study of pitch patterns in the Black English of the United States 147
-
Section 3: Morphophonology
- The role of tone and rhyme structure in the organisation of grammatical morphemes in Tobagonian 165
- Prosodic contrast in Jamaican Creole reduplication 193
- Syllable structure and lexical markedness in Creole morphophonology: Determiner allomorphy in Haitian and elsewhere 209
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Section 4: Derivational morphology
- Early 18th century Sranan -man 231
- Morphological processes of word formation in Chabacano (Philippine Spanish Creole) 253
- The -pela suffix in Tok Pisin and the notion of'simplicity' in pidgin and Creole languages: What happens to morphology under contact? 269
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Section 5: Inflectional morphology
- What verbal morphology can tell us about Creole genesis: the case of French-related Creoles 293
- Inflectional plural marking in pidgins and Creoles: A comparative study 315
- Inflectional categories in Creole languages 333
- Subject Index 365
- Language Index 369
- Author Index 371
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Table of Contents V
- Preface VII
- Introduction IX
-
Section 1: Segments and syllables
- Markedness, faithfulness and creolization: The retention of the unmarked 3
- A new look at nasalization in Haitian Creole 25
- Two types of R deletion in Haitian Creole 43
- Rules vs. analogy: Modeling variation in word-final epenthesis in Sranan 71
- New evidence from the past: To epenthesize or not to epenthesize? That is the question 91
- Syllabic structure and creolization in Saotomense 109
-
Section 2: Stress, tone and intonation
- The accentual system of Haitian Creole: The role of transfer and markedness values 123
- African American English suprasegmentals: Α study of pitch patterns in the Black English of the United States 147
-
Section 3: Morphophonology
- The role of tone and rhyme structure in the organisation of grammatical morphemes in Tobagonian 165
- Prosodic contrast in Jamaican Creole reduplication 193
- Syllable structure and lexical markedness in Creole morphophonology: Determiner allomorphy in Haitian and elsewhere 209
-
Section 4: Derivational morphology
- Early 18th century Sranan -man 231
- Morphological processes of word formation in Chabacano (Philippine Spanish Creole) 253
- The -pela suffix in Tok Pisin and the notion of'simplicity' in pidgin and Creole languages: What happens to morphology under contact? 269
-
Section 5: Inflectional morphology
- What verbal morphology can tell us about Creole genesis: the case of French-related Creoles 293
- Inflectional plural marking in pidgins and Creoles: A comparative study 315
- Inflectional categories in Creole languages 333
- Subject Index 365
- Language Index 369
- Author Index 371