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Bilingualism has given rise to significant changes in
Spanish-speaking countries. In the US, the increasing importance of
Spanish has engendered an English-only movement; in Peru, contact
between Spanish and Quechua has brought about language change; and
in Iberia, speakers of Basque, Galician and Catalan have made their
languages a compulsory part of school curricula and local
government. This book provides an introduction to bilingualism in
the Spanish-speaking world, looking at topics such as language
contact, bilingual societies, bilingualism in schools,
code-switching, language transfer, the emergence of new varieties
of Spanish, and language choice - and how all of these phenomena
affect the linguistic and cognitive development of the speaker.
Using examples and case studies drawn primarily from
Spanish/English bilinguals in the US, Spanish/Quechua bilinguals in
Peru and Spanish/Basque bilinguals in Spain, it provides diverse
perspectives on the experience of being bilingual in distinct
cultural, political and socioeconomic contexts.
Bilingualism has given rise to significant changes in
Spanish-speaking countries. In the US, the increasing importance of
Spanish has engendered an English-only movement; in Peru, contact
between Spanish and Quechua has brought about language change; and
in Iberia, speakers of Basque, Galician and Catalan have made their
languages a compulsory part of school curricula and local
government. This book provides an introduction to bilingualism in
the Spanish-speaking world, looking at topics such as language
contact, bilingual societies, bilingualism in schools,
code-switching, language transfer, the emergence of new varieties
of Spanish, and language choice - and how all of these phenomena
affect the linguistic and cognitive development of the speaker.
Using examples and case studies drawn primarily from
Spanish/English bilinguals in the US, Spanish/Quechua bilinguals in
Peru and Spanish/Basque bilinguals in Spain, it provides diverse
perspectives on the experience of being bilingual in distinct
cultural, political and socioeconomic contexts.
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