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Nasality in Haitian Creole
- Jean-Robert Cadely
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This chapter is in the bookRecent Development in Creole Studies
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatteri
- Prefacev
- Table of Contentsvii
- Introduction: Recent Development in Creole Studies1
- Nasality in Haitian Creole5
- Evidence for Recursive Syllable Structures in Aluku and Sranan31
- Relexification, Reversed Interference, Double Signals and the Organization of the Mental Lexicon53
- Event Descriptions in Fòn and Haitian Creole67
- Restricted Verb Movement in Ngukurr Kriol91
- Licensing Conditions on Cliticization in Cape Verdean Creole109
- Haitian Creole Se: A Copula, a Pronoun, Both or Neither? On the Double Life of a Functional Head135
- Some un-French Properties of Lesser Antillean Grammar175
- Haitian Construct State Nominals: A Creole Contribution to the Theory of Genitive Phrases203
- Menage à Trois: How Promiscuous are Objects in Resultatives?223
- Contributors233
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatteri
- Prefacev
- Table of Contentsvii
- Introduction: Recent Development in Creole Studies1
- Nasality in Haitian Creole5
- Evidence for Recursive Syllable Structures in Aluku and Sranan31
- Relexification, Reversed Interference, Double Signals and the Organization of the Mental Lexicon53
- Event Descriptions in Fòn and Haitian Creole67
- Restricted Verb Movement in Ngukurr Kriol91
- Licensing Conditions on Cliticization in Cape Verdean Creole109
- Haitian Creole Se: A Copula, a Pronoun, Both or Neither? On the Double Life of a Functional Head135
- Some un-French Properties of Lesser Antillean Grammar175
- Haitian Construct State Nominals: A Creole Contribution to the Theory of Genitive Phrases203
- Menage à Trois: How Promiscuous are Objects in Resultatives?223
- Contributors233