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  1. Change of Languages as a Result of Decay and Change of Culture.S. A. Wurm - 1987 - Diogenes 35 (137):39-51.
    In a number of areas, in particular in the Pacific region, it has been observed that languages have undergone simplification processes of their usually very elaborate grammatical structures, and that such elaborate grammatical features have decayed and in some cases entirely disappeared from some languages, hand in hand with the progressing decay, and falling into disuse, of the traditional cultures of the speakers of such languages. Such phenomena of simplification and decay of grammatical complexities are most readily observable in Papuan (...)
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  2. The Silk Road and Hybridized Languages in North-Western China.S. A. Wurm - 1995 - Diogenes 43 (171):53-62.
    The present-day languages and language situation of the Silk Road regions of Central Asia reflect the consequences of the former use of many different languages and the multilingual trading along these routes, as demonstrated by the existence today of a number of hybridized languages whose emergence may in part be attributable to the trading activities on the Silk Road. These languages have, until very recently, received little attention, if any, by linguistic scholars. It has been mainly through the large Language (...)
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    English Finderlist of Reconstructions in Austronesian Languages (Post-Brandstetter)The Case System of Tagalog VerbsBinongan Itneg Sentences.Paz Buenaventura Naylor, S. A. Wurm, B. Wilson, Teresita V. Ramos & Janice Walton - 1979 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 99 (2):337.