Description

Book Synopsis

This collection is the first to examine the effects of bilingualism and multilingualism on the development of dialectal varieties of Spanish in Africa, America, Asia and Europe. Nineteen essays investigate a variety of complex situations of contact between Spanish and typologically different languages, including Basque, Bantu languages, English, and Quechua. The overall picture that evolves clearly indicates that although influence from the contact languages may lead to different dialects, the core grammar of Spanish remains intact.

Silva-Corvalán''s volume makes an important contribution both to sociolinguistics in general, and to Spanish linguistics in particular. The contributors address theoretical and empirical issues that advance our knowledge of what is a possible linguistic change, how languages change, and how changes spread in society in situations of intensive bilingualism and language contact, a situation that appears to be the norm rather than the exception in t

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Students of Spanish as a world language will find both new data and new interpretations of familiar bilingual environments. Language The first book dedicated to language contact and bilingualism in the Spanish-speaking world ... an excellent beginning. Those interested in knowing more about language contact phenomena in the Spanish-speaking world will not be disappointed by this collection. Studies in Second Language Acquisition

Spanish in Four Continents

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    A Paperback by Carmen Silva-Corvalán, Sarah G. Thomason

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      Publisher: Georgetown University Press
      Publication Date: 4/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780878406494, 978-0878406494
      ISBN10: 0878406492

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This collection is the first to examine the effects of bilingualism and multilingualism on the development of dialectal varieties of Spanish in Africa, America, Asia and Europe. Nineteen essays investigate a variety of complex situations of contact between Spanish and typologically different languages, including Basque, Bantu languages, English, and Quechua. The overall picture that evolves clearly indicates that although influence from the contact languages may lead to different dialects, the core grammar of Spanish remains intact.

      Silva-Corvalán''s volume makes an important contribution both to sociolinguistics in general, and to Spanish linguistics in particular. The contributors address theoretical and empirical issues that advance our knowledge of what is a possible linguistic change, how languages change, and how changes spread in society in situations of intensive bilingualism and language contact, a situation that appears to be the norm rather than the exception in t

      Trade Review
      Students of Spanish as a world language will find both new data and new interpretations of familiar bilingual environments. Language The first book dedicated to language contact and bilingualism in the Spanish-speaking world ... an excellent beginning. Those interested in knowing more about language contact phenomena in the Spanish-speaking world will not be disappointed by this collection. Studies in Second Language Acquisition

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