المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6083 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر
تأثير الأسرة والوراثة في الأخلاق
2024-10-28
تأثير العشرة في التحليلات المنطقيّة
2024-10-28
دور الأخلّاء في الروايات الإسلاميّة
2024-10-28
ترجمة ابن عبد الرحيم
2024-10-28
ترجمة محمد بن لب الأمي
2024-10-28
من نثر لسان الدين
2024-10-28

الرابطة الأيونية
2024-10-01
المراد من لفظة «الزفير»
20-10-2014
التقوى والتشيع
2023-09-28
[من تلاميذ الامام زين العابدين]
30-3-2016
يويا والد الملكة ( تي )
2024-05-27
التثقب الكهربائي Electroporation
1-3-2018

Language Starts Over—The Creole Continuum  
  
198   08:17 صباحاً   date: 2024-01-23
Author : P. John McWhorter
Book or Source : The Story of Human Language
Page and Part : 25-31


Read More
Date: 6-1-2022 421
Date: 8-1-2022 387
Date: 2024-01-23 323

Language Starts Over—The Creole Continuum

“Creoleness” is a continuum concept. Some creoles are closer to the language that provided their words than others: Saramaccan is barely recognizable as a kind of English, but French creoles, such as the one of Mauritius, are more like French in their grammars. There are even semi-creoles that are poised between dialect and creole. Many creoles exist as continua of varieties, shading from the European language itself to one quite far from it, with no break in between. In bird’s-eye view, this sheds light on what a “language” can be, such as Spanish, which shades across dialects into Portuguese while also existing in several creole varieties as well as the Spanish-Quechua hybrid Media Lengua, while Portuguese exists as several creoles plus semi-creole varieties in Brazil.

 

Just as one dialect shades into another one, leaving the concept of “language” an artificial and arbitrary one, “creoleness” is a continuum concept. Once we know this, we are in a position to put the finishing touches on our conception of how speech varieties are distributed across the globe.