Anthropological Linguistics, Volume 45, Issue 3Department of Anthropology, Indiana University, 2003 - Comparative linguistics |
Contents
HistoricalEcological Influences on the Word | 259 |
African Interpreters in the Atlantic Slave Trade JOAN M FAYER | 281 |
Language Shift from Mother Tongues towards Fulfulde | 296 |
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acoustic Adamawa African interpreters African languages Amazonian Anthropological Linguistics Anumpa Athabaskan Balée Bata borrowed Caribbean Chamba Choctaw Choctaw Language communication Creole Languages culture cupuaçu dialects discussion domains edited ethnic groups ethnolinguistic vitality example field notes fieldwork Fulani Fulfulde full vowels Girei Gombi Government Areas grammar Grenand Guajá Hausa language Higgi historical intonational Jesuit Ka'apor Kanuri Kilba Krauss language shift lexical tone Língua Geral Amazônica Local Government Areas low tone Lucas Quiaviní Zapotec Mboi Mesoamerica Michael Krauss minority language Minto morphemes morphology mother tongue Ngwaba Nigeria Nishnaabemwin nondomesticated cacao Northern Nigeria Pará Parintintin percent claimed phonetic phonology pidgin Pidgin and Creole Portuguese prosodic reduced vowels Rodrigues Salcha San Lucas Quiaviní significant slave trade speakers speciosum stem stress study area subgroup Tanana term for cacao texts Theobroma Tupí-Guaraní languages Tuttle University verb Wayapi word for cacao Xingu Xingu River Yukaghir Yungur