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ЭФФЕКТИВНОСТЬ ИСПОЛЬЗОВАНИЯ РЕГИОНАЛЬНОГО КОМПОНЕНТА В ВОСПИТАНИИ ТОЛЕРАНТНОСТИ СТУДЕНТОВ ... : THE EFFICIENCY OF USING THE REGIONAL COMPONENT IN RAISING STUDENTS’ TOLERANCE ...
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2
International Bilingual Journal of Culture, Anthropology and Linguistics ...
Pal, Patitpaban. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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3
Where is the Surfer? Where is the Hipster?: Spatial Relations in Southern Californian English vs. Pacific Northwestern English ...
McLean, Jaidan. - : Zenodo, 2021
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4
Where is the Surfer? Where is the Hipster?: Spatial Relations in Southern Californian English vs. Pacific Northwestern English ...
McLean, Jaidan. - : Zenodo, 2021
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5
The survival of traditional dialect lexis on the participatory web
In: English studies. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 101 (2020) 3-4, 487-509
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6
Stylistic variation in African American Language: examining the social meaning of linguistic features in a Seattle community
Abstract: Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020 ; Linguistic features associated with African American Language (AAL) may have a large set of ideological and functional meanings beyond ethnic identity. While sociolinguists know a lot, comparatively, about regional and social differences in the use of features associated with AAL, we know less about how features associated with AAL operate in various interactions and situations. This study presents an opportunity to better understand features associated with AAL among speakers from the Pacific Northwest – specifically focusing on one multi-ethnic community of speakers who were raised in Yesler Terrace in Seattle, Washington. It situates phonetic and phonological variation at the intersection of ethnoracial identity, place, and style, analyzes stylistic (within-speaker) uses of linguistic features in interaction, and considers how individuals enact a range of identities using linguistic features associated with AAL in practice. The dissertation includes three analyses for this study: a descriptive analysis of vowel phonology among a sample of YT members, an Audience Design analysis of stylistic shifts in a single speaker, and a Speaker Design analysis of four speakers, looking at shifts in their use of a linguistic variable across the span of their respective interviews. The study contributes to our understanding of ethnicity and vowel variation in the Pacific Northwest, and finds that African American speakers in YT distinguish themselves from their European American peers by drawing on both super-regional features associated with AAL and features that are understood more as broad regional features. It shows that features associated with AAL can be utilized as a resource for meaning-making, outside of merely signaling some aspect of ethnicity. The study finds that /ɑɪ/ reduction in particular is available for YT members across ethnic lines as a linguistic resource, and argues that use of reduced /ɑɪ/ within YT operates, to some extent, independently of its group-associational meaning as an AAL variant. The study asserts that reduced /ɑɪ/, within the context of the YT interviews, can be used to signal particular working-class attitudes and values associated with growing up in Yesler Terrace. It argues more broadly that the use of linguistic features associated with AAL can be influenced by not only the ethnic makeup of a community, but also by community members’ ethnoracial attitudes, community values, and by a conversation’s interactional context. This work suggests that within multi-ethnic communities, the use of features associated with AAL may be more flexible, granular, and unbounded, and the social meaning of variants associated with AAL may be tied to locally salient values and identities.
Keyword: African American English; African American Language; Linguistics; Regional variation; Sociolinguistics; Style; Stylistic variation
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1773/45513
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7
Variation In African American English: The Great Migration And Regional Differentiation
In: Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations (2020)
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8
Cassidy, Frederic Gomes, 1907-2000 (FA 1375)
In: FA Finding Aids (2020)
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9
ВОЗНИКНОВЕНИЕ И ФОНЕТИЧЕСКИЕ ОСОБЕННОСТИ ФИЛИППИНСКОГО ВАРИАНТА АНГЛИЙСКОГО ЯЗЫКА ... : ORIGIN AND PHONETIC PECULIARITIES OF THE PHILIPPINE VARIANT OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ...
Сидорова Лариса Александровна; Рунгш Надежда Александровна; Засецкова Елена Николаевна. - : ВЕСТНИК ЧУВАШСКОГО ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОГО ПЕДАГОГИЧЕСКОГО УНИВЕРСИТЕТА ИМ. И.Я. ЯКОВЛЕВА, 2019
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10
Meaning and linguistic variation : the third wave in sociolinguistics
Eckert, Penelope. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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11
Finding variants for construction-based dialectometry: a corpus-based approach to regional CxGs
In: Cognitive linguistics. - Berlin ; Boston, Mass. : de Gruyter Mouton 29 (2018) 2, 275-311
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12
Hybrid Ethnicity in the Urban Built Environment ...
Hassonjee, Insia. - : Environmental Design, 2018
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13
Translating Poetics of Place, Memory and Identity: An Exploration of Ignazio Buttitta’s Sicilian Dialect Poetry in English
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14
The sociolinguistic impact of (sub-)urbanization: Mapping /ai/ variation across Houston
Jeon, Lisa R. - 2018
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15
Postcolonial literature and world Englishes : a corpus-based approach of modes of representation of the non-standard in writing [Online resource]
In: International journal of literary linguistics : IJLL 6 (2017) 1, Art. 3, 1-24
Linguistik-Repository
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16
Comparison of vowel acoustics in children from the Northern, Midland, and Southern regions of the United States
Nelson, Alyssa. - : The Ohio State University, 2017
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17
Language Attitudes and the Learning Environment: The Effects of Regional Dialect on Perceptions of Teacher Credibility
In: Honors Theses (2017)
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18
DARE Newsletter, Vol. 20, No. 1, Fall 2017 [<Journal>]
Gardner, Elizabeth; Goebel, George; DARE. - : Dictionary of American Regional English
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19
Changes in British pronunciation models: the rise of Estuary English as a prestige variety
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20
Karin Aijmer: Understanding pragmatic markers: A variational pragmatic approach. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2013. Pp. IX + 162
In: English language and linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 20 (2016) 1, 168-174
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