Lingua franca/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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imported>Caesar Schinas m (Robot: Changing template: TOC-right) |
imported>John Stephenson (→Subtopics: pidgin link) |
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==Subtopics== | ==Subtopics== | ||
{{r|Speech community}} | {{r|Speech community}} | ||
{{r|Pidgin}} | {{r|Pidgin (language)}} | ||
==Other related topics== | ==Other related topics== |
Revision as of 02:59, 7 March 2010
- See also changes related to Lingua franca, or pages that link to Lingua franca or to this page or whose text contains "Lingua franca".
Parent topics
- Linguistics [r]: The scientific study of language. [e]
- Sociolinguistics [r]: Branch of linguistics concerned with language in social contexts - how people use language, how it varies, how it contributes to users' sense of identity, etc. [e]
- Multilingualism [r]: The state of knowing two or more languages, either in individuals or whole speech communities. [e]
- Contact language [r]: any language which is created through contact between two or more existing languages; may occur when people who share no native language need to communicate, or when a language of one group becomes used for wider communication. [e]
Subtopics
- Speech community [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Pidgin (language) [r]: A language with no native speakers and relatively few uses, created spontaneously by two or more groups with no common language, using vocabulary and grammar from multiple sources; often a pidgin's grammar is rudimentary, and it has a restricted set of words, but in time they can develop into more complex 'expanded' pidgins with many more functions. [e]
- Creolistics [r]: The study of creole and pidgin languages. [e]
- Creole (language) [r]: Native language, such as Haitian Creole, which under most definitions originated as a pidgin (a rudimentary language without native speakers, created by at least two groups of speakers as a contact language. i.e. to allow immediate communication) but became as complex as any other language through being acquired by children as a first language. [e]
- Language acquisition [r]: The study of how language comes to users of first and second languages. [e]