Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Tayo, The Strange Bird from New Caledonia
View through CrossRef
According to the Language Bioprogram Hypothesis, the core grammars of all "real" creoles should be alike to a significant degree. Real creoles are then defined as those creoles that were born on plantations, as opposed to those that appeared in so-called fort situations, that is, around trading posts and the like. The validity of the hypothesis depends on the precise characterization of what counts as a plantation situation, which is by no means an obvious task, contrary to what seems to have been assumed. An attempt toward such a characterization is made here. Tayo, a French-based creole spoken in the south of New Caledonia, can be considered a plantation creole and should therefore appear similar to, for example, Haitian and Isle-de-France Creole. That it differs radically from these languages in such basic domains as the determiner and the TMA systems, however, is easily demonstrated. Factors that might explain the difference are then examined, with the conclusion that only relexification from a substrate New Caledonian language can be retained as the primary reason for this difference. Although arguably a plantation creole, Tayo falls thus clearly outside the scope of the LBH, appearing rather as strong supportive evidence for the Relexification Hypothesis. Given the importance of the case for deciding between competing theories, further detailed investigation is urgently needed in order to ascertain whether Tayo is indeed a plantation creole, as it is seems to be, in view of the available historical and ecological evidence.
Title: Tayo, The Strange Bird from New Caledonia
Description:
According to the Language Bioprogram Hypothesis, the core grammars of all "real" creoles should be alike to a significant degree.
Real creoles are then defined as those creoles that were born on plantations, as opposed to those that appeared in so-called fort situations, that is, around trading posts and the like.
The validity of the hypothesis depends on the precise characterization of what counts as a plantation situation, which is by no means an obvious task, contrary to what seems to have been assumed.
An attempt toward such a characterization is made here.
Tayo, a French-based creole spoken in the south of New Caledonia, can be considered a plantation creole and should therefore appear similar to, for example, Haitian and Isle-de-France Creole.
That it differs radically from these languages in such basic domains as the determiner and the TMA systems, however, is easily demonstrated.
Factors that might explain the difference are then examined, with the conclusion that only relexification from a substrate New Caledonian language can be retained as the primary reason for this difference.
Although arguably a plantation creole, Tayo falls thus clearly outside the scope of the LBH, appearing rather as strong supportive evidence for the Relexification Hypothesis.
Given the importance of the case for deciding between competing theories, further detailed investigation is urgently needed in order to ascertain whether Tayo is indeed a plantation creole, as it is seems to be, in view of the available historical and ecological evidence.
Related Results
Traditional ecological knowledge of the bird traders on bird species bird naming, and bird market chain: A case study in bird market Pasty Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Traditional ecological knowledge of the bird traders on bird species bird naming, and bird market chain: A case study in bird market Pasty Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Abstract. Iskandar J, Iskandar BS, Mulyanto D, Alfian RL, Partasasmita R. 2020. Traditional ecological knowledge of the bird traders on bird species bird naming, and bird market ch...
Recent species in old Islands: the origin of introduced populations of Litoria aurea (Anura: Hylidae) in New Caledonia and Wallis
Recent species in old Islands: the origin of introduced populations of Litoria aurea (Anura: Hylidae) in New Caledonia and Wallis
New Caledonia is a megadiverse tropical island in the southwest Pacific, however, inhabited by only one species of amphibian,
Litoria aurea
...
Epidemiology of Gout and Hyperuricemia in New Caledonia
Epidemiology of Gout and Hyperuricemia in New Caledonia
Abstract
Objectives. New Caledonia is a Pacific island of 270,000 inhabitants with mixed ethnicities, including Melanesians (39.1%), Polynesians (10.2%) and people from Eur...
The role of extensional tectonics in shaping Cenozoic New-Caledonia
The role of extensional tectonics in shaping Cenozoic New-Caledonia
Abstract
New-Caledonia island consists of an ultramafic nappe thrusted over a continental and arc-derived basement as the result of the closure of a back-arc basin d...
Meditation and Madness. Ancient and Contemporary Speculation on Chinese Bird Totem Art
Meditation and Madness. Ancient and Contemporary Speculation on Chinese Bird Totem Art
By comparing the forms, meanings and connotations of ancient and contemporary bird symbols, I realize that the driving force for writing this article up to now lies in my judgment ...
The Perils of Proximity: The Geopolitical Underpinnings of Australian Views of New Caledonia in the Nineteenth Century
The Perils of Proximity: The Geopolitical Underpinnings of Australian Views of New Caledonia in the Nineteenth Century
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the links between these far-flung outposts of empire, New Caledonia and Australia, were much stronger than we might realise today. N...
Avian Responses to Novel Landscapes in Aotearoa
Avian Responses to Novel Landscapes in Aotearoa
<p><strong>The alteration of natural landscapes for human use creates a mosaic of different habitats, varied in how much they have been modified from a natural baseline...
TESTING HYPOTHESES ASSOCIATED WITH BIRD RESPONSES TO WILDFIRE
TESTING HYPOTHESES ASSOCIATED WITH BIRD RESPONSES TO WILDFIRE
Disturbance is a key ecological process influencing the distribution and abundance of many elements of the earth's biota. Predicting the response of biota to disturbance is therefo...

