Article published In:
English World-Wide
Vol. 4:2 (1983) ► pp.199229
Cited by (39)

Cited by 39 other publications

Bohmann, Axel & Adesoji Babalola
2023. Verbal past inflection in Nigerian English. In New Englishes, New Methods [Varieties of English Around the World, G68],  pp. 16 ff. DOI logo
Prescod, Paula
2015. Creole reflexes of do. In Language Issues in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines [Varieties of English Around the World, G51],  pp. 141 ff. DOI logo
Hackert, Stephanie
2008. Counting and coding the past: Circumscribing the variable context in quantitative analyses of past inflection. Language Variation and Change 20:1  pp. 127 ff. DOI logo
Weldon, Tracey L.
2007. GULLAH NEGATION: A VARIABLE ANALYSIS. American Speech 82:4  pp. 341 ff. DOI logo
Baugh, John
1997. Researching Race and Social Class in Language Acquisition and Use. In Encyclopedia of Language and Education,  pp. 111 ff. DOI logo
Poplack, Shana & Sali Tagliamonte
1991. African American English in the diaspora: Evidence from old-line Nova Scotians. Language Variation and Change 3:3  pp. 301 ff. DOI logo
Sankoff, Gillian
1991. Review of Holm (): Pidgins and creoles. Vol. 1. Theory and structure. Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 6:2  pp. 310 ff. DOI logo
Winford, Donald
1990. Pidgin and creole languages. Lingua 82:1  pp. 83 ff. DOI logo
Mufwene, Salikoko S. & Marta B. Dijkhoff
1989. On the so-called ‘infinitive’ in Atlantic creoles. Lingua 77:3-4  pp. 297 ff. DOI logo
Edwards, Walter F.
1986. Black street speech: its history, structure, and survival. Journal of Pragmatics 10:4  pp. 503 ff. DOI logo
Bates, Elizabeth
1984. Bioprograms and the innateness hypothesis. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 188 ff. DOI logo
Bickerton, Derek
1984. The language bioprogram hypothesis. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 173 ff. DOI logo
Bickerton, Derek
1984. Creole is still king. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 212 ff. DOI logo
Bloom, Lois
1984. A bioprogram for language: Not whether but how?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 190 ff. DOI logo
Cartmill, Matt
1984. Innate grammars and the evolutionary presumption. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 191 ff. DOI logo
Corne, Chris
1984. On the transmission of substratal features in creolisation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 191 ff. DOI logo
Cromer, Richard F.
1984. Language acquisition: Genetically encoded instructions or a set of processing mechanisms?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 192 ff. DOI logo
Goodman, Morris
1984. Are creole structures innate?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 193 ff. DOI logo
Gopnik, M.
1984. From pidgins to pigeons. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 194 ff. DOI logo
Hornstein, Norbert
1984. Grades of nativism. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 195 ff. DOI logo
Jenkins, Lyle
1984. Pidgins, Creoles, and universal grammar. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 196 ff. DOI logo
Keil, Frank C.
1984. Of pidgins and pigeons. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 197 ff. DOI logo
Lightfoot, David W.
1984. The relative richness of triggers and the bioprogram. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 198 ff. DOI logo
Marantz, Alec
1984. Creolization: Special evidence for innateness?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 199 ff. DOI logo
Maratsos, Michael
1984. How degenerate is the input to creoles and where do its biases come from?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 200 ff. DOI logo
Marshall, John C.
1984. Pidgins are everywhere. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 201 ff. DOI logo
Meier, Richard P.
1984. Sign as creole. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 201 ff. DOI logo
Mufwene, Salikoko S.
1984. The language bioprogram hypothesis, creole studies, and linguistic theory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 202 ff. DOI logo
MUFWENE, SALIKOKO S.
1994. New Englishes and criteria for naming them. World Englishes 13:1  pp. 21 ff. DOI logo
Mufwene, Salikoko S.
2022. Ideology and facts on African American English. Pragmatics. Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA)  pp. 141 ff. DOI logo
Muysken, Pieter
1984. Do creoles give insight into the human language faculty?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 203 ff. DOI logo
Posner, Rebecca
1984. Creolization or linguistic change?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 204 ff. DOI logo
Roberts, Peter A.
1984. Problems with similarities across creoles and the development of creole. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 205 ff. DOI logo
Samarin, William J.
1984. Socioprogrammed linguistics. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 206 ff. DOI logo
Sampson, Geoffrey
1984. Do Creoles prove what “ordinary” languages don't?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 207 ff. DOI logo
Seuren, Pieter A. M.
1984. The bioprogram hypothesis: Facts and fancy. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 208 ff. DOI logo
Slobin, Dan I.
1984. Child language and the bioprogram. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 209 ff. DOI logo
Wang, William S-Y.
1984. Organum ex machina?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 210 ff. DOI logo
Woolford, Ellen
1984. Why creoles won't reveal the properties of universal grammar. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7:2  pp. 211 ff. DOI logo

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