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Tajmyr-Pidgin-Russisch. Kolonialer Sprachkontakt in Nordsibirien
©2012 Monographs -
Pidgin and Creole Linguistics in the Twenty-First Century
©2002 Monographs -
Languages in Competition
The Struggle for Supremacy Among Nigeria’s Major Languages, English and Pidgin©2005 Monographs -
«God i tok long yumi long Tok Pisin»
Eine Betrachtung der Bibelübersetzung in Tok Pisin vor dem Hintergrund der sprachlichen Identität eines Papua-Neuguinea zwischen Tradition und Moderne©2006 Thesis -
Historical Sociolinguistics
Studies on Language and Society in the PastThe interdisciplinary field of Historical Sociolinguistics seeks to reveal the impact of language development on society and the role of individuals and society in the changing forms and usage of language. This book series is aimed at sociolinguists and social historians who are keen to publish studies on the social history of languages, the interaction of linguistic practices and society, and the sociological significance of linguistic variation with a historical dimension. The purpose of the series is to provide empirically supported studies that will challenge and advance current language historiographies, which often continue to present the history of particular languages as necessarily leading to the creation of a standard or prestige variety. Of particular interest are topics such as the following: language myths and language ideology, historical multilingualism and the formation of nation-states, the sociolinguistics of minority and regional languages, the rise of urban vernaculars, immigrants and their languages, the role of prescriptive grammarians, and the social history of pidgins and creoles. Book proposals from historians and linguists working on any language in any period are welcome, in particular those that include a comparative dimension as well as those with a strong empirical foundation. The language of publication is primarily English, though other languages may be considered. The editors guarantee that all publications in this series have been submitted to external and anonymous peer review. The four series editors and twenty-six members of the advisory board are all members of the Historical Sociolinguistics Network (HiSoN). Advisory Board: Anita Auer (Lausanne), Wendy Ayres-Bennett (Cambridge), Andrea Cuomo (Ghent), Steffan Davies (Bristol), Ana Deumert (Cape Town), José del Valle (CUNY), Martin Durrell (Manchester), Jan Fellerer (Oxford), Elin Fredsted (Flensburg), Róisín Healy (Galway), Juan Hernandez-Campoy (Murcia), Kristine Horner (Sheffield), Ernst Håkon Jahr (Agder), Mark Lauersdorf (Kentucky), Anthony Lodge (St Andrews), Nicola McLelland (Nottingham), Miriam Meyerhoff (Oxford), Agnete Nesse (Bergen), Terttu Nevalainen (Helsinki), Taru Nordlund (Helsinki), Gijsbert Rutten (Leiden), Joachim Scharloth (Waseda Tokyo), Peter Trudgill (Fribourg), Marijke van der Wal (Leiden), Rik Vosters (Vrije Universiteit Brussel), Laura Wright (Cambridge)
8 publications
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Sprachwissenschaft für den Alltag. Ein Kompendium
Unter Mitarbeit von Alexander Gräbner. 3., aktualisierte und erweiterte Ausgabe©2014 Others -
De la politesse linguistique au Cameroun - Linguistic politeness in Cameroon
Approches pragmatiques, comparatives et interculturelles- Pragmatic, comparative and intercultural approaches©2008 Edited Collection -
Explorations into Language Use in Africa
©2008 Conference proceedings -
Studies in African Varieties of English
©2003 Edited Collection -
Towards a New Model of Creole Genesis
©1997 Others