ABSTRACT

The authors are outstanding scholars engaged in the study of language varieties spoken in 'convergence areas' in which speakers are multilingual in languages of at least two but sometimes all three language families. Many of the contributions present new data collected in fieldwork. The geographic area covered is Western and Central Asia where varieties of Iranian, Semitic and Turkic languages have entered into many different types of contact. The intricate linguistic contact situations demonstrate highly interesting convergence phenomena.

part |31 pages

Introduction

part 3|143 pages

Turkic Languages

chapter 18|14 pages

On Copying in Kashkay

chapter 19|10 pages

Modal Constructions in Turkic of Iran

chapter 20|10 pages

The Strange Case of Ottoman

part 4|26 pages

Other Perspectives