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21
New approaches to the study of Later Modern English : introduction
In: Historiographia linguistica. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 33 (2006) 1-2, 1-9
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22
A tale of two dialects : relativization in Newcastle and Sheffield
In: Dialects across borders (Amsterdam [etc.], 2005), p. 211-229
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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23
Marks of disgrace : attitude to non-standard pronunciation in 18th-century English pronouncing dictionaries
In: Methods and data in English historical dialectology. - Bern [u.a.] : Lang (2004), 329-349
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24
The Late Modern English grammatical tradition
In: Insights into late modern English. - Bern [u.a.] : Lang (2003), 19-127
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25
"Out in left field" : spelling reformers of the eighteenth century
In: Philological Society <London>. Transactions of the Philological Society. - Oxford [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell 100 (2002) 1, 5-23
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26
From Geordie Ridley to "Viz" : popular literature in Tyneside English
In: Language and literature. - London : Sage 9 (2000) 4, 343-359
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27
Martina Häcker, Adverbial clauses in Scots: a semantic-syntactic study (Topics in English Linguistics 27, ed. Berndt Kortmann & Elizabeth Closs Traugott). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1999. Pp. vii + 253. DM 158, ISBN 3 11 015780 2.
In: English language and linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 4 (2000) 2, 317
OLC Linguistik
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28
"Martina Häcker, Adverbial clauses in Scots: a semantic-syntactic study (Topics in English Linguistics 27, ed. Berndt Kortmann & Elizabeth Closs Traugott). Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1999. Pp. VII + 253" [Rezension]
In: English language and linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 4 (2000) 2, 324-328
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29
Comparing the present with the past to predict the future for Tyneside British English
In: Newcastle & Durham Working Papers in Linguistics (Durham), p. 13-30
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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30
"HappY"-tensing : a recent innovation?
In: Generative theory and corpus studies. - Berlin [u.a.] : Mouton de Gruyter (2000), 483-497
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31
A radical plan for spelling reform : Thomas Spence's "Grand repository of the English language" (1775)
In: Henry Sweet Society for the History of Linguistic Ideas. Bulletin. - Oxford : Soc. (2000) 34, 5-16
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32
"Geordie Nation" : language and regional identity in the Northeast of England
In: Lore and language. - Sheffield : Centre for English Cultural Tradition and Language 17 (1999) 1-2, 33-48
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33
The Jocks and the Geordies : modified standards in eighteenth-century pronouncing dictionaries
In: English Historical Linguistics 1994. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins (1996), 363-382
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34
The Jocks and the Geordies : modified standards in eighteenth-century pronouncing dictionaries
In: Newcastle & Durham Working Papers in Linguistics (Durham, 1994), 2 ; p. 1-22
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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35
Lengthening of a in eighteenth-century English : a consideration of evidence from Thomas Spence's Grand Repository of the English Language and other contemporary pronouncing dictionaries
In: Newcastle & Durham Working Papers in Linguistics (Durham, 1993), 1 ; p. 2-17
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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36
The grammar of Tyneside and Northumbrian English
In: Real English. - London [u.a.] : Longman (1993), 187-213
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37
Goodbye to all that? : The history and present behaviour of optional that
In: An historic tongue. - London [u.a.] : Routledge (1988), 49-66
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38
A real fright : adolescents' narratives of vicarious experience.
In: Language and style. - Flushing, NY : Queens College Press 21 (1988) 1, 16-34
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39
Modal verbs in Tyneside English
In: Atlantic Provinces Linguistic Association. Journal of the Atlantic Provinces Linguistic Association. - St. John's, Newfoundland : Memorial Univ. of Newfoundland, Linguistics Dept. 9 (1987), 43-55
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40
Modal Verbs in Tyneside English
In: Linguistica Atlantica; Vol. 9 (1987); 43 - 55 (1987)
Abstract: Until very recently, the syntax of Tyneside English, like that of most English dialects, has been more or less neglected. This has partly been due to the methodological problems involved in collecting sufficient tokens of forms that will occur rarely in even a long stretch of speech, as is pointed out by Jones-Sargeant (1985). This paper constitutes a condensed account of a larger study carried out by the first-named author: at present, this is the only major study of Tyneside syntax to have been undertaken. The modal syntax of Tyneside differs from that of Standard English in several important ways. Firstly, may and shall are hardly used at all in Tyneside, and at best are stylistic variants of can and will respectively, there being no context in which either may or shall is compulsory. Can and could have even more 'non-modal' characteristics in Tyneside than in Standard English. Other differences between Tyneside and Standard English include the more frequent use of 'epistemic' must and the rarity of ought, which coincides with infrequent use of should in 'non-root, non epistemic' uses as would be predicted by Leech & Coates (1977a and 1977b). Finally, the system of tags is totally different in Tyneside and Standard English respectively, the former having a larger set of options in which single and double negatives, contracted and uncontracted, are contrasted in order to distinguish between tags which ask for information and those requiring confirmation.
URL: https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/la/article/view/32392
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