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Phonotactics, graphotactics and contrast: the history of Scots dental fricative spellings
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ye saidꝭ lettreʒ: the orthographic representation of inflectional morphemes in Older Scots
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Visualising pre-standard spelling practice: Understanding the interchange of ‹ch(t)› and ‹th(t)› in Older Scots
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In: EISSN: 2416-5999 ; Journal of Data Mining and Digital Humanities ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02153662 ; Journal of Data Mining and Digital Humanities, Episciences.org, 2020, Special Issue on Visualisations in Historical Linguistics, Special issue on Visualisations in Historical Linguistics, pp.1-11 (2020)
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Visualising pre-standard spelling practice: understanding the interchange of <ch(t)> and in Older Scots
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Charting the rise and demise of a phonotactically motivated change in Scots
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Early spelling evidence for Scots L-vocalisation: A corpus-based approach
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Towards a grapho-phonologically parsed corpus of medieval Scots: Database design and technical solutions
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The emergence of Scots: Clues from Germanic *a reflexes
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Abstract:
This paper is concerned with the phonological origins of the linguistic variety known today as Scots. We begin with a review of traditional and more recent scholarship on this topic before describing the particular research project from which this paper arises. In Section 2 we examine the circumstances in which the nascent Scots language emerged, noting in particular how contact between multiple Germanic varieties complicates the identification of its most likely progenitor(s). Such complications lead us to consider the problem of origin from the perspective of one particular segment, that of Germanic *a. In Section 3 we, first, introduce this particular case study, then trace the development of the vowel in each relevant daughter variety. On the basis of our findings, we reconstruct the most likely developments of Germanic *a in Scots. An evaluation of the candidate scenarios follows in Section 4, where we conclude that the particular development of Germanic *a in Scots sits at the crossroads of contact-induced and internally-motivated change.
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URL: http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/146732/ https://www.abdn.ac.uk/pfrlsu/documents/PFRLSU/Alcorn_et_al_Emergence_of_Scots.pdf
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Keeping it in the family: disentangling contact and inheritance in closely related languages
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Conditional clauses, Main Clause Phenomena and the syntax of polarity emphasis
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In: Comparative Germanic syntax: the state of the art ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01534968 ; Ackema, Peter; Alcorn, Rhona; Heycock, Caroline; Jaspers, Dany; van Craenenbroeck, Jeroen; Vanden Wyngaerd, Guido. Comparative Germanic syntax: the state of the art, John Benjamins, pp.133-167, 2012, Comparative Germanic syntax: the state of the art, 9789027255747. ⟨10.1075/la.191.05dan⟩ ; https://benjamins.com/#catalog/books/la.191.05dan/details (2012)
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Pronouns, prepositions and probabilities: a multivariate study of Old English word order
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