decreolization
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From de- + creolization.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]decreolization (usually uncountable, plural decreolizations)
- The process of decreolizing.
- 1989, Ofelia García, Ricardo Otheguy, English across cultures, cultures across English, →ISBN, page 277:
- At some point in the decreolization process, however, xenolectal structures become masked by surface-structure mimicry of the matrilect, so that the apparent degree of xenolecticity of the evolving mimolect drops below the real level, as represented by the crossover of A-B and C-D.
- 1990, Edward Herman Bendix, The Uses of Linguistics - Volume 583, →ISBN, page 43:
- In the process, as substantial numbers of black speakers underwent decreolization, their decreolized speech, although technically a mimolect, would have much of the surface form and therefore social status of a true matrilect, and would itself then serve as an additional model for those speakers further behind in the decreolization process.