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- Pieter Muysken, Multilingual ecologies in Surinam: observations, taxonomies, scenarios, constraints [abstract]
- Malcolm Ross, Typologising contact-induced changes in grammatical constructions
[abstract]
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- Juanito Ornelas de Avelar: Social Conditions of 'Imperfect Second Language Learning' and 'Negotiation': Contact-Induced Changes in Prepositional Systems of Portuguese Varieties
- Philip Baker: Accounting for contact-induced changes in Mauritian Creole
- Peter Bakker: Genderlects: gender-differentiated results of language contact
- Nicolas Brucato & Søren Wichmann: Pairing gene-specific and language-specific evidence for population contacts—towards a typology
- Eleanor Coghill: Grammatical borrowing in North-eastern Neo-Aramaic
- Aymeric Daval-Markussen: Testing the significance of sociohistorical factors in creole genesis
- Christian Döhler: Multilingualism in Southern New Guinea - the case of Kómnzo and Wára
- Mark Donohue: Social histories and their different linguistic consequences
- Bridget Drinka: Calquing a Quirk: The role of social conditioning in the spread of the HAVE perfect across Europe
- Iván Igartua: Loss of grammatical gender and non-native language acquisition
- Richard P. Ingham: Differing forms of contact influence between Middle English and Anglo-Norman and their context
- Mathias Jenny, Patrick McCormick & André Müller: Tracing Patterns of Contact and Movement in the Greater Burma Zone
- Anna Jon-And & Elliot Aguilar: Modelling contact-induced language change in Angolan Portuguese
- Petros Karatsareas: Contact-induced typological anomaly versus language-internal dynamics
Differential case marking in Asia Minor Greek
- Danny Law: The social roots of grammatical hybridity in Mayan languages
- Laura Álvarez López & Anna Jon-And: Afro-Brazilian Cupópia: language contact, lexically-driven deliberate change and its grammatical outcomes
- John Mansfield: Murrinh Patha: Post-colonial contact influences on a polysynthetic Australian language
- Carol Myers-Scotton: English Verbs in Nairobi Swahili-English CS: Socio-psychological Factors or Grammatical Structure?
- Johanna Nichols: Favored shifts in derivational morphology accompany expansive contact situations
- Dirk Noël & Timothy Colleman: Same formal pattern, different contact situation, different propagation: Evidential vs. deontic NCI constructions in Dutch (contrasted with English)
- Corinna Scheungraber: Towards a typology of contact-induced morphological change in Indo-European languages
- Kim Schulte: Hybridization of related languages: Which grammatical features are likely to be adopted?
- Frank Seifart: Affix borrowing and social setting
- Margot van den Berg & Robbert van Sluijs: Property concepts in the Caribbean past and the West African present
- Jean-Christophe Verstraete: Personal multilingualism and contact-induced change in Cape York Peninsula, Australia
- Ewa Zakrzewska: Greek influence on Coptic case? Kim Schulte: Hybridization of related languages: Which grammatical features are likely to be adopted?