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Published byGervais Thomas Modified over 9 years ago
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Andrew Schinkowski
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Historical Background 1651 – English settlement of Suriname c. 1665 – Sranan creolized from Caribbean Plantation English 1665 – Jewish settlers arrive from Cayenne 1667 – Suriname surrendered to the Dutch 1668-1675 – English population (and slaves) leave c. 1680 – Sranan partly relexified to Portuguese 1690 – Mass escape of slaves (Saramacca) 1712 – Mass escape of slaves (Ndyuka)
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Suriname overview Early settlers were already familiar with the plantation system (and had already developed pidgins) Relatively small ratio of slaves to Europeans
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Sociolinguistic Background 25,000 members of the Saramaccan tribe and 2,000 members of the Matawi tribe 3 attested dialects: Upper and Lower Suriname River Dialects and Matawi dialect Very little variation noticed between dialects and populations going as far back as 18 th century missionary work
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Sociolinguistic Background (cont.) Isolation continues to a fair degree even today “states within a state” Between period of escape and peace treaty with the Dutch (1762/1767) addition of escaped slaves rare Complex attitudes towards outsiders Superstrates: English, Portuguse* Substrates: Fon, Kikongo
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Linguistic Structure - Phonology Consonants
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Linguistic Structure - Phonology Vowels Matching set of nasal vowels as well Although Portuguese has nasal vowels, appearance is more likely from African language roots 3-way length contrast for vowels
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Linguistic Structure - Phonology Tone System of high, low and unspecified For European-derived words a high tone will appear on the primarily accented element, with the rest unspecified Stone sitónu For African-derived words, a tone is specified for each element Additionally, there are tone rules
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Lexicon English – 50% Portuguese – 35% African/Amerindian – 15%
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Morphology and Syntax SVO head initial language that allows fronting Reduplicated Adjectives Dí miíi dé nákináki. ‘The child is beat up.’ Dí miíi náki.‘The child was beaten.’ Copula system de – verbal status can only appear with PP and AP-complements TMA-marking is done with this form da – pronominal status TMA-marking is blocked with this form
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Morphology and Syntax Copula system Complements- Kone de/*da siki-siki‘Kone is sick.” Kone COPsick-sick TMA marking- Etnelbidewanmalenge-ma EtnelPASTCOPonelazy-MA ‘Etnel was/will be a lazy guy.” *Etnelbidamalenge-ma EtnelPASTCOPlazy-ma Etnel PAST/IRR COP lazy guy.
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Morphology and Syntax V(P)-nominalization with ‘–ma’ hondi-ma‘hunter’ hunt-AG bebe-daan-ma‘drunkard’ drink-rum-AG siki-n’-en-edi-ma‘insane person’ sick-LOC-his-head-AG tja-boto-go-a-wosu-ma‘pilot’ carry-boat-go-LOC-house-AG
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Bibliography Bakker, Peter, Smith, Norval, & Veenstra, Tonjes. (1995). Saramaccan. In J. Arends, P. Muysken, N. Smith (Ed.), Pidgins and Creoles: an introduction (pp. 165-178). Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins North America. Carlin, Eithne B., & Arends, Jacques (Ed.). (2002). Atlas of the Languages of Suriname. Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde: Ian Randle Publishers. Migge, Bettina. (2003). Creole Formation as Language Contact: The Case of the Suriname Creoles. Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins North America. Price, Richard. (1975). Saramaka Social Structure: Analysis of a Maroon Society in Suriname. Rio Piedras, PR: Institute of Caribbean Studies.
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