Advancing Socio-grammatical Variation and Change

Advancing Socio-grammatical Variation and Change

In Honour of Jenny Cheshire

Beaman, Karen V.; Walker, James A.; Buchstaller, Isabelle; Fox, Susan

Taylor & Francis Ltd

04/2022

446

Mole

Inglês

9780367521639

15 a 20 dias

612

Descrição não disponível.
Foreword

Peter Trudgill

Introduction

Socio-grammatical variation and change: Theoretical and methodological implications

Karen V. Beaman, Isabelle Buchstaller, Sue Fox, and James A. Walker

Section 1: CONCEPTUALISING SOCIAL MEANING

Chapter 1.1

Historical and ideological dimensions of grammatical variation and change

Lesley Milroy

Chapter 1.2

Towards an integrated model of perception: Linguistic architecture and the dynamics of sociolinguistic cognition

Erez Levon, Isabelle Buchstaller and Adam Mearns

Chapter 1.3

Migration, class, and prestige in grammatical change in London

Devyani Sharma

Chapter 1.4

The role of syntax in the study of sociolinguistic meaning: Evidence from an analysis of right dislocation

Emma Moore

Section 2: Combining the Social AND THE GRAMMATICAL

Chapter 2.1

What happened to those relatives from East Anglia?: a multilocality analysis of dialect levelling in the relative marker system

David Britain

Chapter 2.2

Relativiser selection in a super-diverse city

Miriam Meyerhoff, Alexandra Birchfield, Elaine Ballard, Catherine Watson and Helen Charters

Chapter 2.3

Swabian relatives: variation in the use of the wo-relativiser

Karen V. Beaman

Chapter 2.4

Modeling Socio-Grammatical Variation: Plural Existentials in Toronto English

James A. Walker

Section 3: Formal Approaches to Syntactic Variation

Chapter 3.1

A sociogrammatical analysis of linguistic gaps and transitional forms

Sjef Barbiers

Chapter 3.2

Variation and Change in the Particle Verb Alternation Across English Dialects

Bill Haddican, Daniel Johnson, Joel Wallenberg and Anders Holmberg

Chapter 3.3

Explaining Variability in Negative Concord: A Socio-syntactic Analysis

David Adger and Jennifer Smith

Section 4: LANGUAGE CONTACT AND Multi-eTHNOLECTS

Chapter 4.1

Tracing the origins of an urban youth vernacular: founder effects, frequency and culture in the emergence of Multicultural London English

Paul Kerswill and Eivind Torgersen

Chapter 4.2

Syntactic variation in prepositional phrases of Cite-Duits, a miners' multi-ethnolect (and other varieties of Dutch and German)

Peter Auer and Leonie Cornips

Chapter 4.3

When Contact Does Not Matter: The Robust Nature of Vernacular Universals

Daniel Schreier

Chapter 4.4

From Killycomain to Melbourne: Historical Contact and the Feature Pool

Karen P. Corrigan

Section 5: Discourse and Pragmatic Variation

Chapter 5.1

That beyond convention: The interface of syntax, social structure and discourse

Sali A. Tagliamonte and Alexandra D'Arcy

Chapter 5.2

Sociolinguistic variation in the marking of new information: The case of indefinite this

Stephen Levey, Carmen Klein and Yasmine Abou Taha

Chapter 5.3

Tagging monologic narratives of personal experience: utterance-final tags and the construction of adolescent masculinity

Heike Pichler
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Main Verb;James A. Walker;Relative Clauses;Sue Fox;Grammatical Variation;Isabelle Buchstaller;MLE;Karen V. Beaman;Syntactic Variation;formal linguistics;Negative Concord;sociolinguistic research;Morphosyntactic Variables;discourse-pragmatic variation and change;Constraint Rankings;morpho-syntactic change;Northern Subject Rule;syntactic change;Young Men;quantitative analysis of socio-grammatical variation;Morphosyntactic Features;variationist sociolinguistics;Specific Indefinite;grammatical variation and change;Topic Persistence;variation in pragmatics;Information Structural Constraints;variation in discourse;Bare Nouns;variation in syntax;Phonetic Features;grammatical levels of linguistic structure;Linguistic Architecture;sociolinguistics;London Jamaican;Jenny Cheshire;Singular Agreement;Semantic Definiteness;Null Variant;Negative Np;British Asian;Strong Reflexives;Toronto English