On the (dis)unity of the Manila Bay Creoles: some lexical strata in Ternateño

Spanish lexifier creoles spoken in various parts of the Manila Bay region have usually been assumed to be descendants from a single creole. Data from Ternateño, the most viable of these languages, suggest that this may have (at least in part) a separate origin from Caviteño and the extinct Ermitaño,...

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Main Author: Anthony Grant
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Associação de Crioulos de Base Lexical Portuguesa e Espanhola 2013-12-01
Series:Journal of Ibero-Romance Creoles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.acblpe.com/revista/volume-4-2013/on-the-disunity-of-the-manila-bay-creoles-some-lexical-strata-in-ternateno
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spelling doaj-cc6d352de355485787e48ecef6b124c42020-12-08T21:43:42ZengAssociação de Crioulos de Base Lexical Portuguesa e EspanholaJournal of Ibero-Romance Creoles2184-53602013-12-0142647On the (dis)unity of the Manila Bay Creoles: some lexical strata in TernateñoAnthony Grant0Edge Hill UniversitySpanish lexifier creoles spoken in various parts of the Manila Bay region have usually been assumed to be descendants from a single creole. Data from Ternateño, the most viable of these languages, suggest that this may have (at least in part) a separate origin from Caviteño and the extinct Ermitaño, apparently because of the settlement of Márdikas (who were free Christians of indigenous origin) from Ternate, North Maluku, in the late seventeenth century. Evidence from Tirona’s 1924 list of alleged Márdika words in Ternateño shows that many of them (several of which are still in use) derive from Malay or from the non- Austronesian languages Bahasa Ternate, and also Tobelo and Galela, all of which are members of the Halmaheran family. None of the words from these sources are found elsewhere in ‘Manila Bay Creoles’, though all show a few similarities which may connect them with Creole Spanish languages of Mindanao.http://www.acblpe.com/revista/volume-4-2013/on-the-disunity-of-the-manila-bay-creoles-some-lexical-strata-in-ternatenoternateñospanishtagalogternategalelatobelomalayportuguesemanila bay creolessubstratum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony Grant
spellingShingle Anthony Grant
On the (dis)unity of the Manila Bay Creoles: some lexical strata in Ternateño
Journal of Ibero-Romance Creoles
ternateño
spanish
tagalog
ternate
galela
tobelo
malay
portuguese
manila bay creoles
substratum
author_facet Anthony Grant
author_sort Anthony Grant
title On the (dis)unity of the Manila Bay Creoles: some lexical strata in Ternateño
title_short On the (dis)unity of the Manila Bay Creoles: some lexical strata in Ternateño
title_full On the (dis)unity of the Manila Bay Creoles: some lexical strata in Ternateño
title_fullStr On the (dis)unity of the Manila Bay Creoles: some lexical strata in Ternateño
title_full_unstemmed On the (dis)unity of the Manila Bay Creoles: some lexical strata in Ternateño
title_sort on the (dis)unity of the manila bay creoles: some lexical strata in ternateño
publisher Associação de Crioulos de Base Lexical Portuguesa e Espanhola
series Journal of Ibero-Romance Creoles
issn 2184-5360
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Spanish lexifier creoles spoken in various parts of the Manila Bay region have usually been assumed to be descendants from a single creole. Data from Ternateño, the most viable of these languages, suggest that this may have (at least in part) a separate origin from Caviteño and the extinct Ermitaño, apparently because of the settlement of Márdikas (who were free Christians of indigenous origin) from Ternate, North Maluku, in the late seventeenth century. Evidence from Tirona’s 1924 list of alleged Márdika words in Ternateño shows that many of them (several of which are still in use) derive from Malay or from the non- Austronesian languages Bahasa Ternate, and also Tobelo and Galela, all of which are members of the Halmaheran family. None of the words from these sources are found elsewhere in ‘Manila Bay Creoles’, though all show a few similarities which may connect them with Creole Spanish languages of Mindanao.
topic ternateño
spanish
tagalog
ternate
galela
tobelo
malay
portuguese
manila bay creoles
substratum
url http://www.acblpe.com/revista/volume-4-2013/on-the-disunity-of-the-manila-bay-creoles-some-lexical-strata-in-ternateno
work_keys_str_mv AT anthonygrant onthedisunityofthemanilabaycreolessomelexicalstratainternateno
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