Search results for "Varieties of English"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Playing with accents

2020

While certain ways of speaking or varieties of English – such as American English or British English – evoke associations of modernity, higher education and urbanity in Uganda, others – such as Ugandan English with strong northern or western accents – stand for backwardness, social strata remote from education and ‘village identities’. Yet concepts of backwardness or modernity are not only based on linguistic criteria but also associated with a specific worldview, contributing to complex signs of higher-order indexicality. In contrast, speakers’ practices of enregisterment reveal how fluid and contextual these indices of urbanity and rurality actually are. Considering diverse repertoires of…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageSociology and Political Science05 social sciencesAmerican EnglishBritish EnglishGender studies06 humanities and the artsBackwardnessSocial stratificationLanguage and Linguisticslanguage.human_language060104 historyVarieties of EnglishRuralityUrbanitylanguage0501 psychology and cognitive sciences0601 history and archaeologySociologyIndexicalitySociolinguistic Studies
researchProduct

Totally new and pretty awesome : Amplifier–adjective bigrams in GloWbE

2017

Abstract Previous work on adjectival intensification (e.g. very good , so glad , really great ) has mostly focussed on the adverbs in question, showing that different (native) varieties of English display distinctive preferences concerning intensifier choice. However, little is known so far about the role that intensifier-adjective units (bigrams) play. The present paper offers a first contribution to fill this research gap by focussing on a data-driven approach to (mostly) high-frequency bigrams and their collocational behaviour in the Corpus of Global Web-based English (GloWbE). Asymmetric and symmetric measures are employed to establish attraction and repulsion between adverb and adjecti…

060201 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageBigram06 humanities and the artsAdverbIntensifierAttractionLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsVarieties of English030507 speech-language pathology & audiology03 medical and health sciences0602 languages and literatureSociology0305 other medical scienceAdjectiveLingua
researchProduct

English Dialect “Default Singulars,” Was versus Were, Verner's Law, and Germanic Dialects

2008

A current suggestion in the variationist literature is that the predominance of forms like we was in nonstandard varieties of English is predictable in that was-generalization represents a case of the “default singular.” I argue that while the principle of the default singular is a sound one, it is not appropriate as an explanation for was-generalization. What is involved is not a matter of singular versus plural but of r-forms of the past tense of to be versus s-forms, with forms like were, war , wor representing the r-variant and was, wiz , wus the s-variant. The ancient Germanic s/r alternation has been leveled out in most dialects over the past millennium. Examination of Germanic dialec…

Varieties of EnglishLiteratureLinguistics and LanguageVerner's lawHistorybusiness.industryDialectologyLinguistic changebusinessComparative linguisticsLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsJournal of English Linguistics
researchProduct