User talk:Me386/sandbox

Hello, As I was going through your article I wanted to send you some edits that I would recommend making. You are off to a great start and have essential information, I would suggest adding a bit more information especially since you have many journal articles. Below I have pasted the changes I would make to your article and bibliography.

Good luck.

Kashubian or Cassubian is a Lechitic language, a kind of Slavic language. It is spoken in the Polish region of Pomerania. Since 2005 it has been protected in Poland as a regional language. It is the only language in Poland with this status, which was given by an act of Polish Parliament on January 6, 2005.

There are approximately 50,000 native speakers of Kashubian today, it is also taught in some state schools. [1]The language is considered to have a Level 1 transmission by the Endangered Languages Project.[1] First generation adults know and speak the language, second generation adults know the language but do not speak it regularly, and third generation children have minimal knowledge on Kashubian from school.[2]Kashubian has around 50 different dialects, all classified into a northern, central, or southern grouping. The language shares syntactic similarities with Polish but has phonological, vocabulary, and word-formation differences.[3]

Bibliography

6. Basic Phonological Patterns Of Contemporary Kashubian. (n.d.). A Historical Phonology of the Kashubian Dialects of Polish, 127-137. doi:10.1515/9783110813388.127

Cezary Obracht-ProndzyńskiDilemmas of Modern Kashubian Identity and Culture 179. (n.d.). The Kashubs: Past and Present. doi:10.3726/978-3-0353-0184-7/8

Nestor, N., & Hickey, T. (2009, 07). Out of the Communist frying pan and into the EU fire? Exploring the case of Kashubian. Language, Culture and Curriculum, 22(2), 95-119. doi:10.1080/07908310903075142

Nomachi, M. (2008). On the recipient passive in the Kashubian Language: Annex to Milka Ivić's syntactic inventory for Slavonic dialectology. Juznoslovenski Filolog, (64), 273-281. doi:10.2298/jfi0864273n

Orlowski, L. T. (n.d.). Monetary and Fiscal Policy in Poland During EU Accession. Macroeconomic Policies for EU Accession. doi:10.4337/9781847205230.00016

Shlemova, N., & Ponomareva, E. (2017, 03). Innovative Media Forms Of Supporting In Modern Intercultural Educational Projects. INTED2017 Proceedings. doi:10.21125/inted.2017.2243

Stanulewicz, D., & Pawłowski, A. (2011). Kashubian colour vocabulary. New Directions in Colour Studies, 105-120. doi:10.1075/z.167.14sta

Towards a Phonemic Typology of the Slavic Languages. (n.d.). The Slavic Languages, 1-20. doi:10.1515/9783110854978.1

Sms729 (talk) 00:47, 7 April 2018 (UTC)