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1
Variation and change at the interface of syntax and semantics : Concessive conjunctions in American English
Schützler, Ole. - : John Benjamins, 2021. : Amsterdam, 2021. : Philadelphia, 2021
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2
Issues of corpus comparability and register variation in the International Corpus of English: Theories and computer applications
Vetter, Fabian. - : Otto-Friedrich-Universität, 2021. : Bamberg, 2021. : "SPLIT", 2021
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3
'Although'‐constructions in varieties of English
Schützler, Ole. - : Wiley-Blackwell, 2021. : Oxford [u.a.], 2021
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4
Frequency changes and stylistic levelling of though in diachronic and synchronic varieties of English – linguistic democratisation?
Schützler, Ole. - : Elsevier, 2021. : New York, NY [u.a.], 2021
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5
A corpus-based study of concessive conjunctions in three L1-varieties of English
Schützler, Ole. - : Amsterdam, 2021. : Philadelphia, 2021
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6
New perspectives on Scottish Standard English: Introducing the Scottish component of the International Corpus of English
Gut, Ulrike; Fuchs, Robert; Schützler, Ole. - : De Gruyter Mouton, 2021. : Berlin, 2021
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7
Unstable close-mid vowels in modern Scottish English
Schützler, Ole. - : Peter Lang, 2021. : Frankfurt/M., 2021
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8
Concessive conjunctions in written American English : Diachronic and genre-related changes in frequency and semantics
Schützler, Ole. - : John Benjamins, 2021. : Amsterdam, 2021
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9
Grammaticalisation and information structure : two perspectives on diachronic changes of 'notwithstanding' in written American English
Schützler, Ole. - : Cambridge Univ. Press, 2021. : Cambridge, 2021
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10
Which WAY do Scottish monophthongs GO? : Charting vowel variation in Scottish Standard English
Schützler, Ole. - : Cambridge Scholars, 2021. : Newcastle/Tyne, 2021
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11
How British is Gibraltar English?
Krug, Manfred; Werner, Valentin; Schützler, Ole. - : Bloomsbury Academic, 2020. : London, 2020
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12
How British is Gibraltar English?
Schützler, Ole; Krug, Manfred; Werner, Valentin. - : Otto-Friedrich-Universität, 2020. : Bamberg, 2020
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13
Recent change and grammaticalization
Krug, Manfred; Schützler, Ole. - : Cambridge University Press, 2019. : Cambridge, 2019
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14
Transforming acoustic vowel data : A comparison of methods, using multi-dimensional scaling
Schützler, Ole. - : Peter Lang, 2019. : Bern, 2019
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15
Statistical approaches to hierarchical data in sociophonetics: The case of variable rhoticity in Scottish Standard English
Schützler, Ole. - : Cambridge, 2019
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16
The sociophonology and sociophonetics of Scottish Standard English (r)
Schützler, Ole. - : Benjamins, 2019. : Amsterdam [u.a.], 2019
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17
Vowel variation in Scottish Standard English : Accent-internal differentiation or anglicisation?
Schützler, Ole. - : Palgrave Macmillan, 2019. : Basingstoke [u.a.], 2019
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18
Patterns of linguistic globalization : Integrating typological profiles and questionnaire data
Krug, Manfred G.; Schützler, Ole; Werner, Valentin. - : John Benjamins, 2019. : Amsterdam, 2019
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19
Regional (in-)variability of vowel space organisation in Scottish Standard English
Schützler, Ole. - : Peter Lang, 2019. : Bern, 2019
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20
Variable Scottish English consonants: The cases of /ʍ/ and non-prevocalic /r/
Schützler, Ole. - : Versita, 2019. : Warsaw, 2019
Abstract: In a sample of 27 speakers of Scottish Standard English two notoriously variable consonantal features are investigated: the contrast of /ʍ/ and /w/ and non-prevocalic /r/, the latter both in terms of its presence or absence and the phonetic form it takes, if present. The pattern of realisation of non-prevocalic /r/ largely confirms previously reported findings. But there are a number of surprising results regarding the merger of /ʍ/ and /w/ and the loss of non-prevocalic /r/: While the former is more likely to happen in younger speakers and females, the latter seems more likely in older speakers and males. This is suggestive of change in progress leading to a loss of the /ʍ/ - /w/ contrast, while the variation found in non-prevocalic /r/ follows an almost inverse sociolinguistic pattern that does not suggest any such change and is additionally largely explicable in language-internal terms. One phenomenon requiring further investigation is the curious effect direct contact with Southern English accents seems to have on non-prevocalic /r/: innovation on the structural level (i.e. loss) and conservatism on the realisational level (i.e. increased incidence of [r] and [ɾ]) appear to be conditioned by the same sociolinguistic factors.
Keyword: Phonetics; Scottish English; Sociolinguistics
URL: https://doi.org/10.2478/v10015-010-0010-9
https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/39271
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