Sociolinguistic Variation and Change

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Sociolinguistic Variation and Change

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 208 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780878403691
  • DDC分類 306.44

Full Description


This selection of Peter Trudgill's major works since 1988, appearing here in updated and revised form, reveals major recurring themes in his work on linguistic diversity. This book evinces his deep concern that the world's linguistic diversity is diminishing at an alarming rate. The linguistic future is likely to be very different from the past, because increased language contact among peoples will result in the creation of fewer new languages to balance the language deaths. The essays here manifest Trudgill's conviction that linguists must make every effort to study minority languages and dialects before they vanish. The book also demonstrates his sense of the obligation that linguists have to educate the public about why linguistic diversity is valuable. The book deals with a number of specific but related topics. One area is the role of English in the world, and the nature of Standard English or Englishes. Another is language as a human issue, reflecting the author's concern that the results of sociolinguistic research should be made available to assist, wherever possible, with the solution of educational and other real-world problems. A third focus is on the problematic and interconnected relationships among nation and language and dialect, but, unlike the work of most other writers in this field, this book looks closely at the linguistic characteristics of the varieties concerned. The final major emphasis is on sociohistorical linguistics: in particular, the relationship between colonial and motherland varieties of English; dialect contact and language contact; and the sociolinguistically informed dialectology of linguistic theory, linguistic description, and the applications of linguistics. The major overall unifying theme of the book is linguistic variation and, as the diachronic outcome of linguistic variation, linguistic change.

Contents

I. Sociohistorical Linguistics Introduction: Sociohistorical linguistics 1. British vernacular dialects in the formation of American English: the case of East Anglian do 2. Short 'o' in East Anglia and New England 3. Sociohistorical linguistics and dialect survival: a note on another Nova Scotian enclave II. Dialect Change Introduction: Dialect Change 4. Two hundred years of dedialectalisation: the East Anglian short vowel system 5. New-dialect formation and dedialectisation: embryonic and vestigial variants 6. Norwich revisited: recent linguistic changes in an English urban dialect III. Language Contact Introduction: Language Contact 7. Dual-source pidgins and reverse creoloids: northern perspectives on language contact 8. Language contact and the function of linguistic gender 9. Third-person singular zero: African American vernacular English, East Anglian dialects and Spanish persecution in the Low Countries 10. Language Contact and inherent variability: the absence of hypercorrection in East Anglian present-tense verb forms IV. Language creation and language death Introduction: Language creation and language death 11. Ausbau sociolinguistics and the perception of language status in contemporary Europe 12. Ausbau sociolinguistics and identity in modern Greece 13. Language maintenance and language shift: preservation versus extinction V. Englishes Introduction: Englishes 14. English as an endangered language 15. Standard English: what it isn't 16. The sociolinguistics of modern RP