Title: Cornelia Neubert
1Dialectology Accents, Dialects Languages
2Dialectology the study of dialects
- Commonly thought
- Substandard form of a language
- Form of language, spoken in isolated parts
- No written form
- Deviation from the norm
- BUT
- All speakers are speakers of at least one dialect!
3Dialect an approach
Subdivisions of a particular language e.g.
Bavarian dialect of German Yorkshire
dialect of English Damascene dialect of
Arabic But how can a language be distinguished
from a dialect?
4Language an approach
- Collection of mutually intelligible dialects
- Mutual intelligibility dependent on
- Degree of education
- Listeners degree of exposure to another
language - Willingness to understand
5Language, dialect and accent
- Language is equally a
- political,
- historical,
- sociological,
- cultural and
- linguistic notion.
- Language has an army and a navy.
6Language, dialect and accent
- Variety is any particular kind of language which,
for some purpose, is considered as a single
entity - Saxon German
- Chemnitz German
- Northern Irish English
- Belfast English
- working class Parisian French
7Language, dialect and accent
- Accent is the way in which a speaker pronounces
words. - It refers to a variety which is phonetically
and/or phonologically different from other
varieties.
8Language, dialect and accent
- Dialect refers to varieties which are
grammatically (and perhaps lexically) and
phonologically different from other varieties. - I done it last night.
- I did it last night.
9Geographical dialect continuum
- Dialects on the outer edge of a geographical area
may not be mutually intelligible, but they are
linked by a chain of mutual intelligibility. - The greater the geographical distance the greater
the difficulty in comprehension. - gt cumulative
10Geographical dialect continuum
West Romance dialect continuum (French, Italian,
Catalan, Spanish, Portuguese) Scandinavian
dialect continuum (Danish, Swedish,
Norwegian) West Germanic Continuum (German,
Dutch, Flemish) North Slavic dialect
continuum (Russian, Ukrainian, Polish, Czech,
Slovak)
11Social dialect continuum
- Linguistic history of Jamaica
- Highest class Its my book. English
- /??s ma? b?k/ Dialect
- Intermediate /?z ma? b?k/ Conti-
- Classes /?z m? b?k/
nu- - /a m? b?k dat/ um
- Lowest class /a f? m? b?k dat/ Deepest
Creole - The range between pure English to the deepest
Creole forms the social dialect continuum.
12Autonomy and heteronomy
The Netherlands Germany
Dutch
German
with Dutch dialects
with German dialects
West Germanic dialect continuum
13Autonomy and heteronomy
- Formerly Danish region of Sweden
14Autonomy and heteronomy
----- pre-1658 post-1658 Scandinavian
dialect continuum
15Dialect geography
- The impetus
- Until the 2nd half of the 19th century the
characterization of dialect areas were casual and
intuitive - Neogrammarians began to search for general
principles of language changes - Verners Law (Vernersches Gesetz) Every
phonological change is rule-governed - Hypothesis of the Ausnahmslosigkeit der
Lautgesetze (sound changes are exceptionless) - Result Development of dialect geography, a
methodology for the systematic gathering of
dialect differences
16History of dialect geography
- 1876 Georg Wenker sending 50,000 questionnaires
with standard German expressions to German
schools with the request of the transcription
into the local dialect. - 1881 Result Sprachatlas des Deutsches Reiches,
- the very first linguistic atlas published
- 1896 Jules Gilliéron hired the fieldworker
Edmond Edmont, who recorded 700 interviews at 639
sites - 1902 1910 thirteen volumes on dialects in
France - 1940 Sprachatlas und Sachatlas des Italiens und
der Südschweiz - 1962 1978 Survey of English Dialects (SED)
17History of dialect geography
- 1930 Funding of the Linguistic Atlas of the
United - States and Canada training of
field workers - 1939 1943 Linguistic Atlas of New England
- 1949 Word Geography of the Eastern United
States - 1953 A Survey of Verb Forms in the Eastern
United - States
- 1961 Pronunciation of English in the Atlantic
States - 1973 1976 The Linguistic Atlas of the Upper
Midwest - Since 1985 Dictionary of American Regional
English - - DARE (2002 Vol. IV, P-SK)
18Bibliography
Chambers,J. K. and Trudgill, P. 1993.
Dialectology. Cambridge University
Press. Brockhaus Enzyklopädie. Neunzehnte
Auflage. F.A. Brockhaus GmbH. Encyclopaedia
Britannica. 2005. http//de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sh
ibboleth http//polyglot.lss.wisc.edu/dare/dare.h
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