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7 - Sociophonetics and Sound Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2021

Tyler Kendall
Affiliation:
University of Oregon
Valerie Fridland
Affiliation:
University of Nevada, Reno
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Summary

Chapter 7 reviews the major theories of sound change that have emerged over the past centuries, honing in on more modern user-based theories most synergistic with sociophonetics.The chapter examines how sociophonetics, and its growth from work in sociolinguistics, has redirected the focus on sound change from a historical and system internal perspective to one forged by and crucially interconnected with the social needs of its users.Along these lines, the discussion emphasizes the empirical approach to the "problems" of sound change articulated in the foundational work by Weinreich, Herzog and Labov in 1968.Turning to recent research that explores these "problems" from a sociophonetic perspective, the treatment suggests that sociophonetics does not just continue a tradition of interest in sound change, it provides new opportunity to understand at a more fine-grained level than ever before the mechanisms underlying language change.

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Chapter
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Sociophonetics , pp. 156 - 177
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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References

Further Reading

Hay, Jennifer and Foulkes, Paul 2016. The Evolution of Medial /t/ over Real and Remembered TimeLanguage 92(2): 298330.Google Scholar
Labov, William 1989. The Child as Linguistic HistorianLanguage Variation and Change 1(1): 8597.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ohala, John J. 1993. Sound Change as Nature’s Speech Perception Experiment. Speech Communication 13(1–2): 155161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pierrehumbert, Janet B. 2006. The Next ToolkitJournal of Phonetics 34(4): 516530.Google Scholar
Stuart-Smith, Jane, Pryce, Gwilym, Timmins, Claire and Gunter, Barrie. 2013. Television Can Also Be a Factor in Language Change: Evidence from an Urban DialectLanguage 89(3): 501536.Google Scholar

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