6 langues concernées
36 titres trouvés
[2226] Bernsten, Jan[ice] Graham & Carol Myers-Scotton (1993) : English loans in Shona: consequences for linguistic systems
[6625] Finlayson, Rosalie , Karen Calteaux & Carol Myers-Scotton (1998) : Orderly mixing: codeswitching and accommodation in South Africa
[14730] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1965) : Some Swahili political words
[14731] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1967) : Semantic and syntactic subcategorization in Swahili causative verb shapes
[14732] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1967) : Aspects of the Swahili extended verb system, with special reference to some deep structure syntactic and semantic relations
[14733] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1969) : A look at the Swahili of two groups of up-country speakers
[14734] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1970) : The perception of Swahili competence among two groups of the working population in Kampala
[14735] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1971) : Towards a sociolinguistic theory fo choosing a lingua franca: a system of costs and rewards in Kampala where Swahili is often a ‘best buy’
[14736] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1972) : Choosing a lingua franca in an African capital
[14740] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1975) : Multilingualism in Lagos: what it means to the social scientist
[14741] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1975) : The role of norms and other factors in language choice in work situations in three African cities (Lagos, Kampala, Nairobi)
[14742] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1977) : Linguistic performances as subjective measures: some findings and implications
[14743] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1978) : Language in East Africa: linguistic patterns and political ideologies
[14744] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1979) : The context is the message: morphological, syntactic and semantic reduction and deletion in Nairobi and Kampala varieties of Swahili
[14745] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1981) : Extending inalienable possession: the argument for an extensive case in Swahili
[14746] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1981) : Rethinking inalienable possession in Swahili: the extensive case
[14747] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1982) : Learning lingua francas and socioeconomic integration: evidence from Africa
[14748] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1982) : Language use in Kenya: an urban-rural comparison of the Luyia
[14750] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1984) : Roots in Swahili? A locative copula becomes a stative marker
[14751] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1985) : Language universals and syntactic changes in Swahili as a second language
[14752] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1988) : Codeswitching and types of multilingual communities
[14753] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1991) : Making ethnicity salient in codeswitching
[14754] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1991) : Simplification: not the best explanation for two language changes in Nairobi Swahili
[14755] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1992) : Comparing codeswitching and borrowing
[14756] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1992) : Codeswitching in Africa: a model of the social functions of code selection
[14757] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1992) : Codeswitching as a mechanism of deep borrowing, language shift and language death
[14758] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1993) : Social motivations for codeswitching: evidence from Africa
[14759] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1993) : Building the frame in code-switching: evidence from Africa
[14760] Myers-Scotton, Carol (1993) : Elite closure as a powerful strategy: the African case
[14761] Myers-Scotton, Carol (2000) : Comparing verbs in Swahili/English codeswitching with other data sets
[15986] Myers-Scotton, Carol & Gregory John Orr (1980) : Learning Chichewa
[14737] Myers-Scotton, Carol & John Okeju (1972) : Loanword integration in Ateso
[14738] Myers-Scotton, Carol & John Okeju (1973) : Loanwords and the borrowing process in two Ateso dialects
[14739] Myers-Scotton, Carol & John Okeju (1973) : Neighbours and lexical borrowing: a study of two Ateso dialects in terms of sociological influences on borrowing
[14749] Myers-Scotton, Carol & W. Ure (1982) : The linguistic situation and language policy in eastern Africa
[18678] Slabbert, Sarah & Carol Myers-Scotton (1997) : The structure of Tsotsitaal and Iscamtho: code switching and in-group identity in South African townships