Atlas of Languages of Intercultural Communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas : : Vol I: Maps. Vol II: Texts / / ed. by Darrell T. Tryon, Peter Mühlhäusler, Stephen A. Wurm.
“An absolutely unique work in linguistics publishing – full of beautiful maps and authoritative accounts of well-known and little-known language encounters. Essential reading (and map-viewing) for students of language contact with a global perspective.” Prof. Dr. Martin Haspelmath, Max-Planck-Instit...
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Superior document: | Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Asian Studies Archive (pre 2000) eBook Package |
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HerausgeberIn: | |
Place / Publishing House: | Berlin ;, Boston : : De Gruyter Mouton, , [2011] ©1996 |
Year of Publication: | 2011 |
Language: | English |
Series: | Trends in Linguistics. Documentation [TiLDOC] ,
13 |
Online Access: | |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource |
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Table of Contents:
- Volume I: Maps
- Frontmatter
- Australia
- New Zealand
- Melanesia (Papua New Guinea)
- Melanesia (Fiji)
- Polynesia
- Metropolitan Language (English)
- Metropolitan Language (French, including Creoles)
- Metropolitan Language (Spanish, including Creoles)
- Metropolitan Language (Portuguese, including Creoles)
- Metropolitan Language (Dutch and German, including Pidgins)
- Metropolitan Language (Russian) (also applies to Siberia)
- Metropolitan Language (Japanese, including Pidgins)
- Pidgins (General)
- Pidgins (English)
- Languages used in the Domain of Religion in Insular Southeast Asia and Oceania
- Arabic-based and other Contact Languages on Maritime Trade Routes to China
- South-East Asia (Insular, including Irian Jaya)
- Philippines
- Taiwan
- South-East Asia (Continental)
- Indian Subcontinent
- China
- Mongolia
- Central Asia
- Caucasus Area
- Siberia
- Arctic Areas
- Canada, Northwest Coast and Alaska
- United States Area
- Mexico
- Central America
- South America
- Modern Media in the Pacific Area
- Volume II.1: Texts
- Frontmatter
- Australia
- General remarks on Australia
- Post contact languages in mainland Australia after 1788
- Koines and indigenous lingue franche in Australia
- Early language contact in Tasmania
- Pidgin English in New South Wales
- Language contacts and Pidgin English in Victoria
- Pidgins and creoles of Queensland
- Nineteenth century language contact in South Australia
- Post-contact languages of Western Australia
- Post-contact Aboriginal languages in the Northern Territory
- Aboriginal English
- The diffusion of Pidgin English in Australia
- New Zealand
- General introduction and notes on the Map 'Aotearoa - New Zealand: population, ethnicity, languages'
- New Zealand English: Speech
- New Zealand English lexis
- The Maori language in New Zealand
- Moriori: language death (New Zealand)
- English-Maori contact languages in New Zealand
- The Indians and their languages in New Zealand
- Pacific Island languages in New Zealand
- The Dalmatians and their language in New Zealand
- The New Zealand Chinese
- The Germans and their language in New Zealand
- The Poles and their language in New Zealand
- The Greeks and their language in New Zealand
- The Dutch and their language in New Zealand
- Melanesia
- Languages in contact in Central and South-east Mainland Papua New Guinea
- Other pidgins in Papua New Guinea
- Privately owned Mekeo-based trade languages
- Pidgin Fijian and Pidgin Hindustani in Fiji
- Metropolitan languages (in part including pidgins and creoles)
- The English language in the Asia Pacific region
- French in the South Pacific
- The Creole language Tayo and language contact in the 'Far South' region of New Caledonia
- Spanish in the Pacific
- Portuguese and Creole Portuguese in the Pacific and Western Pacific rim
- Dutch in the Pacific area
- German in the Pacific area
- The spread of Russian settlement and language in Siberia from the sixteenth century onwards
- Japanese language in the Pacific
- Pidgins (General and English)
- Precolonial patterns of intercultural communication in the Pacific Islands
- Post-contact pidgins, creoles, and lingue franche, based on non-European and indigenous languages
- English-derived contact languages in the Pacific in the 19th century (excluding Australia)
- English-derived contact languages in the Pacific in the 20th century (excluding Australia)
- Palmerston English
- Productive fellow
- The development and diffusion of pronouns in Pacific Pidgin English
- The origins and diffusion of Pidgin English in the Pacific
- Languages used in the domain of religion in insular southeast Asia and Oceania
- Mission and church languages in Papua New Guinea
- Mission and church languages in Island Melanesia
- Philippines: mission and religious languages
- Languages used in the domain of religion in Indonesia
- Arabic-based and other contact languages on maritime trade routes to China
- The potential for the development of Arabic-based and other contact languages along the maritime trade routes between the Middle East and China, from the start of the Christian era
- South-East Asia (Insular, including Irian Jaya)
- Malay: its history, role and spread
- Contact languages in Indonesia and Malaysia other than Malay
- Some trade languages of insular South-East Asia and Irian Jaya
- Notes of the use of Geser as a trade language in eastern Indonesia
- Indonesian-the official language of a multilingual nation
- Malay-the national language of Malaysia
- Philippines
- Major languages of wider communication and Trade Languages of the Philippines
- Intercommunication between speakers of minor languages in the Philippines
- Taiwan
- The lingue franche in Taiwan
- South-East Asia (Continental)
- Burmese as a lingua franca
- Kachin
- Lahu
- Nagamese
- Nepali as a lingua franca
- Bantawa Rai
- Empires and lingue franche in premodern South-East Asia
- Southwestern Dai as a lingua franca
- Vietnamese
- Yunnanese Chinese
- Indian Subcontinent
- Languages of interethnic communication on the Indian Subcontinent (excluding Nepal)
- Volume II.2: Texts
- Frontmatter
- China
- Preliminary thoughts on Chinese and Chinese contact languages in the Pacific area
- North China: Intercultural communication involving indigenous languages other than Chinese
- Mongolic languages as idioms of intercultural communication in Northern Manchuria
- Tibetan
- Yi
- Some hybrid languages in China
- The Ejnu language
- The Hezhou language
- The Tangwang language
- The Wutun language
- The Mongols in Yunnan
- An example of multilingualism in the Great Northwest of China
- Hybrid Chinese of the Mongol Period (13th-14th century)
- Korea
- Some remarks on present-day intercultural communication in South Korea
- Mongolia
- Contact languages and language influences in Mongolia
- Central Asia
- Languages of interethnic communication in the area of Central Asia and Kazakhstan
- Languages of interethnic communication in Uzbekistan
- Languages of interethnic contacts in Karakalpakistan, the former Karakalpak Autonomous ASSR
- Languages of interethnic communication in Turkmenistan
- Languages of interethnic communication in Kazakhstan
- Languages of interethnic communication in Kirgizistan
- Languages of interethnic communication in Tajikistan
- Languages of interethnic communication in the Gorno-Badakhshan province of Tajikistan
- Shugni as a lingua franca in the Parnir area
- The languages of the 'Silk Route' up to the 16th century
- Caucasus Area
- Language situation, language contacts and contact languages in the Caucasus area
- The Avar language area
- The Lezgian languages area
- Siberia
- Siberia: 1650-1950 ethnic and linguistic changes
- Indigenous lingue franche and bilingualism in Siberia (beginning of the 20th century)
- Some lingue franche and pidgins in North Siberian and North Pacific areas at the beginning of the 20th century
- Ethnic composition of the population, ethno-cultural contacts and languages of interethnic communication in the northeast of the Asian coastal areas of the Pacific Ocean
- The Far North-East of Russia
- Interethnic contacts of the aboriginal population of Kamchatka
- The linguistic situation on Sakhalin Island
- Use of languages in the southern part of the Russian Far East
- 'Govorka'-the pidgin Russian of the Taymyr Peninsular area
- Selkup as lingua franca
- Finger-counting with Buryats and Evenkis in Siberia Buryat finger-counting
- Finger-counting with Buryats and Evenkis in Siberia Hand-counting with the Sym Evenkis
- Arctic Areas
- History of Eskimo interethnic contact and its linguistic consequences
- Aleut and the Aleuts in contact with other languages and peoples
- Semaphoric communication, western Aleuts
- Canada, Northwest Coast and Alaska
- Interethnic communication in Canada, Alaska and adjacent areas
- Michif and other languages of the Canadian Métis
- Chinook Jargon and its distribution in the Pacific Northwest and beyond
- The Russian
- language in Alaska and in Alaskan native languages
- United States Area
- Native American contact languages of the contiguous United States
- The Plains Indian Sign Language
- Mexico
- Languages of intercommunication in Mexico
- Central America
- Restructured languages in the Caribbean area
- Negerhollands
- Island Carib
- South America
- Quechua, a language of intercultural communication in the Middle Andes
- Aymaran, the Lake Titicaca area, and the central part of the Pacific coastal area of Perú
- Araucanian, a language of intercultural communication in the Southern Andes
- Media Lengua in Ecuador
- Callahuaya in Bolivia
- The Tupí-Guaraní languages of Atlantic South America, and Línguas Gerais
- Areas of multilingualism in northern South America
- Berbice Dutch Creole
- Literacy and modern media in communication in the Pacific Area
- Literacy in Oceania
- Modern media in the Pacific area and their role in intercultural communication
- Subject finder list to the text volume. Part 1
- Subject finder list to the text volume. Part 2
- Subject finder list to the text volume. Part 3
- Subject finder list to the text volume. Part 4
- Subject finder list to the text volume. Part 5
- Subject finder list to the text volume. Part 6