Language and a Sense of Place
Studies in Language and Region
Herausgeber: Montgomery, Chris; Moore, Emma
Language and a Sense of Place
Studies in Language and Region
Herausgeber: Montgomery, Chris; Moore, Emma
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This book explores twenty-first century approaches to place by bringing together a range of language variation and change research.
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This book explores twenty-first century approaches to place by bringing together a range of language variation and change research.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 386
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Juli 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 165mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 736g
- ISBN-13: 9781107098718
- ISBN-10: 1107098718
- Artikelnr.: 47721956
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 386
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Juli 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 165mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 736g
- ISBN-13: 9781107098718
- ISBN-10: 1107098718
- Artikelnr.: 47721956
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Part I. Changing Places: 1. Changing places: tracking innovation and
obsolescence across generations Sali A. Tagliamonte; 2. Changing sounds in
a changing city: an acoustic phonetic investigation of real-time change
over a century of Glaswegian Jane Stuart-Smith, Brian José, Tamara Rathcke,
Rachel Macdonald and Eleanor Lawson; 3. Local vs. supralocal: preserving
language and identity in Newfoundland Sandra Clarke; 4. Variation and
change in the realisation of /r/ in an isolated Northumbrian dialect Warren
Maguire; Part II. Describing Places: 5. Corpora for regional and social
analysis Karen P. Corrigan; 6. Using archives to conduct collaborative
research on language and region Fiona Douglas; 7. Maps and mapping in
(perceptual) dialect geography Chris Montgomery; 8. Which way to look?:
perspectives on 'urban' and 'rural' in dialectology David Britain; Part
III. Identifying Places: 9. Identifying places: the role of borders Dominic
Watt and Carmen Llamas; 10. 'I stole it from a letter, off your tongue it
rolled': the performance of dialect in Glasgow's indie music scene Miriam
Krause and Jennifer Smith; 11. Where the black country meets 'black
Barnsley': dialect variation and identity in an ex-mining community of
Barnsley Kate Burland; 12. 'The land steward wouldn't have a woman farmer':
the interaction between language, life trajectory and gender in an island
community Emma Moore and Paul Carter; Part IV. Enregistering Places: 13.
Characterological figures and expressive style in the enregisterment of
linguistic variety Barbara Johnstone; 14. Enregisterment, and the social
meaning of howay': dialect and identity in north-east England Julia Snell;
15. Indexing Acadian identities Ruth King; 16. 'Turtlely amazing': the
enregisterment of 'Yorkshire' dialect and the possibility of GOAT fronting
as a newly-enregistered feature Paul Cooper.
obsolescence across generations Sali A. Tagliamonte; 2. Changing sounds in
a changing city: an acoustic phonetic investigation of real-time change
over a century of Glaswegian Jane Stuart-Smith, Brian José, Tamara Rathcke,
Rachel Macdonald and Eleanor Lawson; 3. Local vs. supralocal: preserving
language and identity in Newfoundland Sandra Clarke; 4. Variation and
change in the realisation of /r/ in an isolated Northumbrian dialect Warren
Maguire; Part II. Describing Places: 5. Corpora for regional and social
analysis Karen P. Corrigan; 6. Using archives to conduct collaborative
research on language and region Fiona Douglas; 7. Maps and mapping in
(perceptual) dialect geography Chris Montgomery; 8. Which way to look?:
perspectives on 'urban' and 'rural' in dialectology David Britain; Part
III. Identifying Places: 9. Identifying places: the role of borders Dominic
Watt and Carmen Llamas; 10. 'I stole it from a letter, off your tongue it
rolled': the performance of dialect in Glasgow's indie music scene Miriam
Krause and Jennifer Smith; 11. Where the black country meets 'black
Barnsley': dialect variation and identity in an ex-mining community of
Barnsley Kate Burland; 12. 'The land steward wouldn't have a woman farmer':
the interaction between language, life trajectory and gender in an island
community Emma Moore and Paul Carter; Part IV. Enregistering Places: 13.
Characterological figures and expressive style in the enregisterment of
linguistic variety Barbara Johnstone; 14. Enregisterment, and the social
meaning of howay': dialect and identity in north-east England Julia Snell;
15. Indexing Acadian identities Ruth King; 16. 'Turtlely amazing': the
enregisterment of 'Yorkshire' dialect and the possibility of GOAT fronting
as a newly-enregistered feature Paul Cooper.
Part I. Changing Places: 1. Changing places: tracking innovation and
obsolescence across generations Sali A. Tagliamonte; 2. Changing sounds in
a changing city: an acoustic phonetic investigation of real-time change
over a century of Glaswegian Jane Stuart-Smith, Brian José, Tamara Rathcke,
Rachel Macdonald and Eleanor Lawson; 3. Local vs. supralocal: preserving
language and identity in Newfoundland Sandra Clarke; 4. Variation and
change in the realisation of /r/ in an isolated Northumbrian dialect Warren
Maguire; Part II. Describing Places: 5. Corpora for regional and social
analysis Karen P. Corrigan; 6. Using archives to conduct collaborative
research on language and region Fiona Douglas; 7. Maps and mapping in
(perceptual) dialect geography Chris Montgomery; 8. Which way to look?:
perspectives on 'urban' and 'rural' in dialectology David Britain; Part
III. Identifying Places: 9. Identifying places: the role of borders Dominic
Watt and Carmen Llamas; 10. 'I stole it from a letter, off your tongue it
rolled': the performance of dialect in Glasgow's indie music scene Miriam
Krause and Jennifer Smith; 11. Where the black country meets 'black
Barnsley': dialect variation and identity in an ex-mining community of
Barnsley Kate Burland; 12. 'The land steward wouldn't have a woman farmer':
the interaction between language, life trajectory and gender in an island
community Emma Moore and Paul Carter; Part IV. Enregistering Places: 13.
Characterological figures and expressive style in the enregisterment of
linguistic variety Barbara Johnstone; 14. Enregisterment, and the social
meaning of howay': dialect and identity in north-east England Julia Snell;
15. Indexing Acadian identities Ruth King; 16. 'Turtlely amazing': the
enregisterment of 'Yorkshire' dialect and the possibility of GOAT fronting
as a newly-enregistered feature Paul Cooper.
obsolescence across generations Sali A. Tagliamonte; 2. Changing sounds in
a changing city: an acoustic phonetic investigation of real-time change
over a century of Glaswegian Jane Stuart-Smith, Brian José, Tamara Rathcke,
Rachel Macdonald and Eleanor Lawson; 3. Local vs. supralocal: preserving
language and identity in Newfoundland Sandra Clarke; 4. Variation and
change in the realisation of /r/ in an isolated Northumbrian dialect Warren
Maguire; Part II. Describing Places: 5. Corpora for regional and social
analysis Karen P. Corrigan; 6. Using archives to conduct collaborative
research on language and region Fiona Douglas; 7. Maps and mapping in
(perceptual) dialect geography Chris Montgomery; 8. Which way to look?:
perspectives on 'urban' and 'rural' in dialectology David Britain; Part
III. Identifying Places: 9. Identifying places: the role of borders Dominic
Watt and Carmen Llamas; 10. 'I stole it from a letter, off your tongue it
rolled': the performance of dialect in Glasgow's indie music scene Miriam
Krause and Jennifer Smith; 11. Where the black country meets 'black
Barnsley': dialect variation and identity in an ex-mining community of
Barnsley Kate Burland; 12. 'The land steward wouldn't have a woman farmer':
the interaction between language, life trajectory and gender in an island
community Emma Moore and Paul Carter; Part IV. Enregistering Places: 13.
Characterological figures and expressive style in the enregisterment of
linguistic variety Barbara Johnstone; 14. Enregisterment, and the social
meaning of howay': dialect and identity in north-east England Julia Snell;
15. Indexing Acadian identities Ruth King; 16. 'Turtlely amazing': the
enregisterment of 'Yorkshire' dialect and the possibility of GOAT fronting
as a newly-enregistered feature Paul Cooper.