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T-to-R and the Northern Subject Rule: questionnaire-based spatial, social and structural linguistics1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2013
Extract
Accents and dialects of English and Scots in Britain have been under active investigation for many decades, as reported through the Survey of English Dialects (Orton et al. 1962–71) and the Linguistic Atlas of Scotland (Mather et al. 1975–86), Wells’ three-volume compendium (1982), and a host of detailed studies of individual varieties. There are also welcome recent signs of the reintegration of variation data into theoretical discussion (see Henry 2002, Cornips & Corrigan 2005a and Trousdale & Adger 2007 for morphosyntax, as well as Anttila 2002 and Coetzee & Pater 2011 for phonology). Nonetheless, the precise structural, geolinguistic and sociolinguistic patterning of many features of vernacular Englishes in the UK is still largely unknown.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013
Footnotes
The authors wish to acknowledge the intellectual contribution to the British Academy project that generated this research by April McMahon, Aberystwyth University. We are, of course, also grateful to the British Academy for their financial contribution to the research via its Small Grants Scheme (see: www.lel.ed.ac.uk/dialects/nesps.html).
References
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