Why Do Languages Die, and Haw?
Nowadays, sociolinguists are of the opimon that languages are organic entities, which go through a predictable life cycle of birth, infancy, maturation, then gradual decay and death. On the other hand, the current age is, undoubtedly, the age of great transformations, rapid developments and extreme...
Main Authors: | yahyaa modarres, hasan bashir nejhad |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | fas |
Published: |
Allameh Tabataba'i University Press
2006-12-01
|
Series: | Matn/Pizhūhī-i Adabī |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://ltr.atu.ac.ir/article_6386_d5a5d1b32989bc0b97e13a7e0c07aa53.pdf |
Similar Items
-
Afrikaans as an index of identity among Western Cape Coloured communities
by: Thutloa, Alfred Mautsane, et al.
Published: (2011-12-01) -
Language Contact, Contamination, Containment, and Shift: Lessons From Multilingual Gwanda South, Zimbabwe
by: Erasmos Charamba, et al.
Published: (2023-07-01) -
When your language is disappearing: Canadian Doukhobor Russian
by: Veronika Makarova
Published: (2022-03-01) -
Language maintenance: Factors supporting the use and maintenance of isiZulu in Soshanguve
by: Nontobeko T. Mbatha, et al.
Published: (2023-01-01) -
Communities of Practice in the Warlpiri Triangle: Four Decades of Crafting Ideological and Implementational Spaces for Teaching in and of Warlpiri Language
by: Emma Browne, et al.
Published: (2021-04-01)