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Not all grammatical features are robustly transmitted during the emergence of creoles

Linguistics and Languages

Not all grammatical features are robustly transmitted during the emergence of creoles

S. Sessarego

This groundbreaking research by Sandro Sessarego delves into the complexities of creole languages, challenging the notion that they have the simplest grammars. The study presents a novel theoretical framework that highlights how borrowing, imposition, and grammatical reduction shape creole development, leading to selective preservation of certain grammatical features. Discover the intricacies of language transmission and evolution!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
This paper addresses the long-standing debate on the nature and complexity of creole languages. Contrary to what has been claimed in the literature, it is argued that grammars are neither robustly transmitted during the emergence of creoles nor that creole languages represent the simplest grammars in the world. On the contrary, after laying down a theoretical framework that spells out the existence of at least three distinct second-language acquisition (SLA) processes shaping creoles, it is shown how different aspects of the ancestor grammars (and their potential complexities) may or may not be transmitted to the emerging creoles and why.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jul 01, 2020
Authors
Sandro Sessarego
Tags
creole languages
grammatical transmission
second-language acquisition
borrowing
grammatical reduction
language evolution
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