Linguistic Consequences of Language Contact and Restriction: The Case of French in Ontario, Canada

Front Cover
Clarendon Press, 1991 - Foreign Language Study - 247 pages
The description of minority or threatened languages with a view to documenting the linguistic consequences of language contact and restriction has now emerged as a distinct area of investigation within sociolinguistics. In this book, Raymond Mougeon and Edouard Beniak present a series ofanalyses of the impact that contact with English on the one hand, and language-use restriction on the other, have had on the evolution of the French dialect spoken in the predominantly English-speaking province of Ontario, Canada. As a background to the analyses, the authors provide sociohistoricaland sociolinguistic information on the Franco-Ontarian community, and make comparisons with other varieties of French both within and outside North America. They address fundamental theoretical issues such as the interplay between linguistic and extralinguistic causes of structural change and themechanisms of linguistic change in bilingual as opposed to unilingual speech communities.

About the author (1991)

Edouard Beniak, Research Associate; both at Centre for Franco-Ontarian Studies, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education.

Bibliographic information