
Language Variation - European Perspectives
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- Language Variation - European Perspectives
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of Contents
- Twenty-five authors on twelve languages, sixteen language varieties, and eighteen hundred and eighty-eight speakers
- 1. Foreword: background
- 2. An overview
- 3. Overlap and complementarity in focus, research questions and approach
- 4. Concluding remarks
- References
- Phrasal Verbs in Venetan and Regional Italian
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The formal properties of phrasal verbs
- 3. The aspectual use of two Ps, fora "out" and su "up".
- 4. The distribution of phrasal verbs in the linguistic spectrum
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Regional variation in intonation
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Tonology of the nuclear rise-fall
- 3. Data and methods
- 4. Conversational functions of the Colognian nuclear rise-fall
- 5. Comparison with the nuclear rise-fall in Standard German
- 6. Summary and conclusions
- References
- Internal and external factors for clitic-shape variation in North-Eastern Catalan
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Data sources
- 3. Methodology
- 4. Distribution of VC and CV clitics
- 5. Data analysis
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Appendix
- The native / non-native speaker distinction and the diversity of linguistic profiles of young people in Swedish multilingual urban contexts
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Definitions and uses of 'native speaker' (NS) within linguistics
- 3. Applying the concept of native speaker in a contemporary multilingual context
- 4. Concluding discussion
- References
- Language acquisition in a multilingual society
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The pilot study
- 3. Findings
- 4. Discussion
- References
- Regional accent in the German language area
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Point of departure
- 3. The 'Regional accent in the German language area' project
- 4. Pilot study: How dialectally do German police answer emergency calls?
- 5. Prospects
- References
- Sustainable Linguicism
- 1. On linguicism and standard language ideology in Hungary*
- 2. The Hungarian National Sociolinguistic Survey (HNSS)
- 3. The linguistic variables in this study
- 4. The independent social variables
- 5. Standard Hungarian ideology and its targets
- 6. Learnability
- 7. Multi-generational effects in second-dialect acquisition
- 8. The effects of educational mobility
- 9. How to officially ratify societal prejudice
- 10. Linguicism at its worst
- 11. Teachers
- 12. Conclusions
- References
- Phonetic variation in Tyneside
- 1. Exploratory multivariate analysis
- 2. The NECTE data
- 3. Hierarchical cluster analysis of the TLS phonetic transcriptions
- 4. Conclusion
- References
- Production and judgment in childhood
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methods
- 3. Results
- 4. Discussion
- References
- Stereotypes and /n/ variation in Patra, Greece
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background information
- 3. Description of the variation
- 4. An OT account of the variation
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Modelling linguistic change
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Data
- 3. The trajectory of the future variants throughout the Portuguese grammatical tradition
- 4. A variationist perspective on the alternation among SF, HP, P and IR
- 5. Results
- 6. The transition period in language change
- References
- The role of linguistic factors in the process of second dialect acquisition
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Location, informants and questionnaire
- 3. Intersystemic correspondences
- 4. Discussion and conclusion
- References
- Folk views on linguistic variation and identities in the Belarusian-Russian borderland
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The language situation in Belarus
- 3. Region and respondents
- 4. Perceptions and categorizations of linguistic phenomena and differences
- 5. Discussion and conclusion
- References
- Appendix: interview extract
- Polarisation revisited
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Polarisation
- 3. Some Flemish cases of polarisation
- 4. Kleit vs. Landegem
- 5. Polarisation revisited
- 6. To conclude
- References
- Ethnicity as a source of changes in the London vowel system
- 1. The short vowel systems in London and south-east England
- 2. The London localities and recordings
- 3. Method of analysis
- 4. Results
- 5. Discussion
- References
- Levelling, koineization and their implications for bidialectism
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Levelling, koineization and register variation
- 3. Levels of language use
- 4. On diglossia and bidialectism
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Subject index
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