Affiliation:
1. University of Regensburg, Germany
Abstract
Abstract
Guianese French Creole1 (GFC) is one of the least studied French Creoles,
which is especially true with respect to its non-French-related input. Combining sociohistorical, demographic and linguistic data,
this contribution gives a first lexico-etymological account of the GFC lexicon of non-French origin, including Amerindian and
Portuguese influences and especially the quantitative and qualitative nature of the contribution made by different Niger-Congo
languages. These findings are discussed in light of controversial hypotheses on the particular influence of early numerical and/or
socially dominant ethnolinguistic groups on the creole lexicon (i.e. Baker 2012), as
well as with regard to word classes and semantic domains to which the different groups contributed. Whereas Gbe and non-Gbe
languages clearly diverge with regard to their semantic contribution, the early dominance of presumably Gbe-speaking slaves in
French Guiana is not reflected in the numerical proportion of Gbe-related lexical items in GFC, at least on the basis of my still
limited data. This study thus tentatively confirms the lesser explanatory power of the lexicon for creole genesis scenarios and
points to the fact that sub- or adstrate-related lexical items may have taken very complex etymological routes, which clearly need
further study.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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