Contact Languages of the Pacific

Title
Contact Languages of the Pacific
Publication Date
2020-07-28
Author(s)
Siegel, Jeff
Editor
Editor(s): Raymond Hickey
Type of document
Book Chapter
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Place of publication
Chichester, United Kingdom
Edition
2
Series
Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics
DOI
10.1002/9781119485094.ch37
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/31398
Abstract
With over 1,000 indigenous languages and a recent history of colonial exploitation, the Pacific region has provided a fertile context for the growth of contact languages. This chapter first describes new languages (pidgins and creoles) and then new dialects (koines and indigenized varieties) that have emerged in the Pacific as the result of language contact. Pidgins are new languages that develop out of a need for a medium of communication among people who do not share a common language – for example, between traditional trading partners or among plantation laborers from diverse geographic origins. Although the chapter shows the diverse origins and linguistic features of Pacific contact varieties, some commonality in their development can also be seen in various shared characteristics. These include formal simplicity compared to contributing languages.
Link
Citation
The Handbook of Language Contact, p. 741-762
ISBN
9781119485063
9781119485056
9781119485025
Start page
741
End page
762

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