All Stories

  1. 1. Identity and multilingualism
  2. Language rights, human development and linguistic diversity in a globalizing world
  3. Review of Sakoda & Siegel (2003): Pidgin grammar. An introduction to the creole language of Hawai‘i
  4. Orthographic practices in the standardization of pidgins and creoles: Pidgin in Hawai'i as anti-language and anti-standard
  5. “We had like to have been killed by thunder & lightning”
  6. Tok Pisin Texts
  7. English. A corpus-based view of gender in British and American English
  8. Review of Wurm, Mühlhäusler & Tryon (1996): Atlas of languages of intercultural communication in the Pacific, Asia and the Americas
  9. Creole Genesis, Attitudes and Discourse
  10. Review of Wekker (1996): Creole languages and language acquisition
  11. The Grammaticalization of the Proximative in Tok Pisin
  12. Charlene Junko Sato (1951–1996)
  13. Preface
  14. Changing Attitudes to Hawai’i Creole English
  15. Gender, grammar, and the space in between
  16. Toward a Reference Grammar of Tok Pisin: An Experiment in Corpus Linguistics
  17. 5. The status of sociological models and categories in explaining language variation
  18. “Lice he no good”
  19. The Grammaticalization of Irrealis in Tik Pisin
  20. Review of Winford (1993): Predication in Caribbean English Creoles
  21. The Evolution of Complexity in a Creole Language
  22. The Decline of Predicate Marking in Tok Pisin
  23. Change and variation in the use ofbaiin young children's creolized Tok Pisin in Morobe Province
  24. English and Tok Pisin (New Guinea Pidgin English) in Papua New Guinea
  25. Some Differences Between Spoken and Written Tok Pisin
  26. Short Forms in Tok Pisin
  27. Review of Görlach (1985): Focus on: Scotland
  28. The Problem of Short /a/ in Scotland
  29. Review of McCawley (1982): Thirty Million Theories of Grammar
  30. Why the Problem of Language Acquisition should not be Explained Logicaly
  31. Review of Sandred (1983): Good or Bad Scots? Attitudes to Optional Lexical and Grammatical Usages in Edinburgh
  32. On the productivity of word formation rules and limits of variability in the lexicon
  33. Review of Cheshire (1982): Variation in an English Dialect. A Sociolinguistic Study
  34. A critical overview of the methodology of urban British sociolinguistics
  35. Review of Milroy (1980): Language and Social Networks
  36. The Status of Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea: The Colonial Predicament
  37. Variability in Tok Pisin phonology: "Did you say 'pig' or 'fig'?"