Difference between revisions of "Contact language (i.e. language in contact)"

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(New page: The term '''contact language''' is often used informally to refer to a language with which another language has been in contact. ===Example=== Linguists often say thi...)
 
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''Contact language'' also has a more specific meaning, see [[contact language (created by contact)]].
 
''Contact language'' also has a more specific meaning, see [[contact language (created by contact)]].
  
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[[Category:Language contact]]
 
[[Category:Language contact]]

Latest revision as of 19:22, 22 June 2014

The term contact language is often used informally to refer to a language with which another language has been in contact.

Example

Linguists often say things such as "English has borrowed many words, but almost no syntactic features from its major contact languages Latin, Old Norse, and Norman French".

Polysemy

Contact language also has a more specific meaning, see contact language (created by contact).

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