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Hali ya kutatanisha ya Kiswahili hivi leo Afrika ya MasharikiSengo, Tigiti Shaaban Yusuf 30 November 2012 (has links) (PDF)
The essay critically discusses the confusing state of the various Swahili language policies and studies brought forth in the colonial and post-colonial periods and examines the historical factors of the diversity within the Swahili language, which was once confined to the coastal area and later spread to the present area of distribution. The discussion focusses on the construction of Standard Swahili and the status of Swahili in regard to other East African languages. Special criticism is raised against recent East African and other authors, who wrote on the apparent unity of the Swahili language which they see as a result of the modern Tanzanian language policy.
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Der Ausbau des Bunjewatzischen zu einer südslavischen MikroliteraturspracheHenzelmann, Martin 23 June 2020 (has links)
Against the background of Slavonic microlinguistics, the Bunjevac dialect in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina in Serbia is particularly interesting, and its sociolinguistic status is not very clear. The Bunjevci speak a Neo-Shtokavian Ikavian dialect, which has developed its own tradition of writing, but it is not standardized yet. Especially after 1990, language codification has become one of the main goals of some activists, and currently, it is questioned whether we should consider Bunjevac to be a dialect or a separate language. In contrast to this fundamental question, the possibility that Bunjevac could be classified as a microlanguage is rarely discussed.
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Hali ya kutatanisha ya Kiswahili hivi leo Afrika ya MasharikiSengo, Tigiti Shaaban Yusuf 30 November 2012 (has links)
The essay critically discusses the confusing state of the various Swahili language policies and studies brought forth in the colonial and post-colonial periods and examines the historical factors of the diversity within the Swahili language, which was once confined to the coastal area and later spread to the present area of distribution. The discussion focusses on the construction of Standard Swahili and the status of Swahili in regard to other East African languages. Special criticism is raised against recent East African and other authors, who wrote on the apparent unity of the Swahili language which they see as a result of the modern Tanzanian language policy.
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