In this book, contributors have been brought together to discuss
the role of two major factors shaping the grammars of different
varieties of English (and of other languages) all over the world:
so-called vernacular universals and contact-induced change. Rather
than assuming a general typological perspective, the studies in
this volume focus on putative universal vernacular features -
significant phonological or (morpho-) syntactic parallels found in
non-standard varieties of English, English-based Creoles, and also
varieties of other languages, all of which represent widely
differing sociolinguistic and historical backgrounds. These
universals are then set against the other major explanatory factor:
contact-induced change, by which we understand both the possibility
of dialect contact (or dialect diffusion) and language contact
(including superstratal, substratal and adstratal influences).
General
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