Robert McColl Millar has emerged as a highly original and innovative thinker. Drawing on predominant theories in the field, his latest work offers a fresh and thought-provoking account of varieties in interaction, and his illustrative showcases make this an ideal reading for anybody interested in the sociolinguistic evolution of English.Professor Daniel Schreier, University of Zurich

- Profesor Daniel Schreier, University of Zurich,

Presents a new approach to issues of language and dialect contact Much has been written on dialect formation through contact between dialects of the same language, but the question of what happens when closely related but linguistically discrete varieties come into contact with each other has largely been neglected. Here Robert McColl Millar sets out to redress this imbalance, giving the reader the opportunity to analyse and consider a variety of different contact scenarios where the language varieties involved are close relatives and to explore the question: are the results of contacts of this type different by their nature from where linguistically distant (or entirely different) varieties come into contact? Bringing together the diverse theoretical positions associated with the production of new dialects as well as those associated with contact between closely related but discrete language varieties, the volume invites the reader to evaluate different scholarly views using analysis from a range of different case-studies, largely derived from the history and diversity of English. It then goes on to demonstrate the similarities in process and end result between contact involving discrete but closely related languages and between dialects of the same language, and in doing so offers a new and insightful approach to issues of language contact.
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Much has been written on dialect formation through contact between dialects of the same language, but the question of what happens when closely related but linguistically discrete varieties come into contact with each other has largely been neglected. Here Robert McColl Millar sets out to redress this imbalance.
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Chapter 1: Some introductory thoughtsChapter 2: New dialect formation and near-dialect contactChapter 3: New dialect formation and time depthChapter 4: Linguistic contact and near-relative relationshipsChapter 5: English in the ‘transition period’: the sources of contact induced changeChapter 6: ConclusionsReferences
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Analyses a variety of different language contact scenarios

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781474431903
Publisert
2018-02-28
Utgiver
Edinburgh University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
224

Biografisk notat

Robert McColl Millar is Reader in Linguistics in the School of Language & Literature at the University of Aberdeen. His books include Northern and Insular Scots (2007), Authority and Identity. A Sociolinguistic History of Europe before the Modern Age (2010) and English Historical Sociolinguistics (2012).