Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages

Volume 30 : Number 2: 2015


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Table of Contents

Articles

01- Explaining Korandjé: Language contact, plantations, and the trans-Saharan trade – Lameen Souag

02- Continuum and variation in Creoles: Out of many voices, one language – Marlyse Baptista

03- Nominal architecture in Jamaican Creole – Stéphanie Durrlemann

04- Traces of Portuguese in Afro-Yungueño Spanish? – Danae M. Perez

Short Notes

05- Corrections on the History and Design of Haitian Creole Scrabble – Benjamin Hebblethwaite

06- La genèse des créoles de l’Océan Indien: A response to Aymeric Daval-Markussen – Robert Chaudenson

07- To benefit from the L1 education, teach the L2 optimally… – A Mooznah Auleear Owodally

Guest Column

08- Creoles, creole studies and sign languages – Peter Bakker

Book Reviews

09- Atlas linguistique des Petites Antilles. Volumes 1 and 2, edited by Jean Le Dû and Guylaine Brun-Trigaud – Reviewed by Anthony P. Grant

10- Chinuk Wawa / kakwa nsayka ulman-tilixam ɬaska munk-kəmtəks nsayka / As our elders teach us to speak it. The Chinuk Wawa dictionary project – Reviewed by Peter Bakker

11- The former Portuguese Creole of Batavia and Tugu (Indonesia). By Philippe Maurer – Reviewed by Alan N. Baxter

12- The syntax and semantics of a determiner system: A case study of Mauritian Creole. By Diana Guillemin – Reviewed by Muhsina Alleesaib

13- Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad & Tobago. By Lise Winer – Reviewed by Joseph T. Farquharson

14- Kwéyòl in postcolonial St. Lucia: Globalization, language planning, and national development. By Aonghas St-Hilaire – Reviewed by Sandra Evans

15- Hugo Schuchardt, Textes théoriques et de réflexion (1885–1925) – Reviewed by Bernhard Hurch

16- Creoles, their substrates, and language typology. Edited by Claire Lefebvre – Reviewed by Patrick-André Mather

17- Creolization and contraband. Curaçao in the early modern Atlantic world. By Linda M. Rupert – Reviewed by Bart Jacobs


The Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages (JPCL) aims to provide a forum for the scholarly study of pidgins, creoles, and other contact language varieties, from multi-disciplinary perspectives. The journal places special emphasis on current research devoted to empirical description, theoretical issues, and the broader implications of the study of contact languages for theories of language acquisition and change, and for linguistic theory in general. The editors also encourage contributions that explore the application of linguistic research to language planning, education, and social reform, as well as studies that examine the role of contact languages in the social life and culture, including the literature, of their communities.