
Language Variation and Change in the American Midland
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- Language Variation and Change in the American Midland
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Dedication
- Table of contents
- Introducing the Midland
- The Midland: What is it?
- The Midland: Where is it?
- The Midland: How do we know?
- Notes
- What is dialect?
- Introduction
- Background of the Midland controversy
- Defining the Midland
- Midland grammar
- Conclusions
- Notes
- I. The Evolving Midland
- The North American Midland as a dialect area
- Introduction
- Dialect regions of the United States
- Settlement
- Methods and results
- Conclusion
- Tracking the low back merger in Missouri
- Introduction
- The low back merger in American English
- Methods
- Results and discussion
- Conclusions
- Notes
- Appendix
- Excerpts from the Written Questionnaire
- Evidence from Ohio on the evolution of /æ/
- /æ/ and the Midwest
- /æ/ and social history
- Methods of acoustic analysis
- /æ/ patterns across Ohio
- Implications for the history of /æ/
- Conclusions
- Notes
- II. Defining the Midland
- On the use of geographic names to inform regional language studies
- Note
- On the eastern edge of the Heartland
- Introduction
- Scholarly accounts
- Popular accounts from the Web
- Discussion
- Why an industrial city dialect forms: Conflict theory explanations
- Why an industrial city dialect forms: Dialectology and sociology of language explanations
- Where are the dialects going? Youngstown shifts
- Other evidence
- The current Pittsburgh dialect
- Broader significance of this study
- Dialects reflect, and are formed within, a cultural division of labor
- Note
- Appendix
- The final days of Appalachian Heritage Language*
- Introduction
- Qualitative analysis
- Subject-verb concord
- Demonstrative and pleonastic pronouns
- Quantitative analysis: Monophthongization of /aj/
- Conclusion
- Notes
- It'll kill ye or cure ye, one
- History
- Elicitations
- Four hypotheses
- Discussion and conclusion
- Notes
- III. Power and Perception
- Standardizing the Heartland
- Notes
- How to get to be one kind of Midwesterner
- Notes
- Midland(s) dialect geography
- Note
- Drawing out the /ai/
- Introduction
- Dialect areas and variants of /ai/: Hans Kurath and Raven McDavid
- Distribution of monophthongal /ai/: William Labov et al.
- /ai/ in Illinois: Timothy Frazer
- Vowel plots: Erik Thomas
- LAGS: Regional and social variation
- Attitude study: Alabama and Texas sorority project
- Conclusion: Sociolinguistic and regional boundaries of /ai/
- Notes
- IV. Other Languages, Other Places
- Learning Spanish in the North Georgia Mountains
- The Midland above the Midland
- Introduction
- Model selection for individual items
- Lexical forms
- Phonological forms
- Grammatical forms
- Correspondence Analysis
- Conclusions
- Portable community
- Strawberry runners, portable community, and linguistic homogeneity
- Regional variation in the Deitsch of Southeastern Pennsylvania
- The spread of Deitsch across the Midwest
- The notion and practice of portable community
- Evidence for linguistic homogeneity of Midwestern Deitsch
- The psychological reality of Midwestern Deitsch
- Conclusion
- Notes
- The English of the Swiss Amish of Northeastern Indiana
- The speech community
- The Swiss Amish use of English
- Contexts for the use of English
- Results of English use survey
- Possible explanations for the shift to English
- Interference and borrowing from English to German
- Amish and non-Amish varieties of English
- Amish intercommunity variation
- Amish to non-Amish variation
- Impressionistic observations
- Conclusions
- Notes
- References
- Index
- The series Varieties of English Around the World
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