In:Lifespan Acquisition and Language Change: Historical sociolinguistic perspectives
Edited by Israel Sanz-Sánchez
[Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics 14] 2024
► pp. 234–263
Chapter 10Language dominance across the lifespan in Wisconsin German and
English varieties
Voice onset time and final obstruent neutralization, 1863–2013
Published online: 4 April 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/ahs.14.10lit
https://doi.org/10.1075/ahs.14.10lit
Abstract
Large-scale German immigration to Wisconsin
began in the first half of the 19th century and continued until
about World War I. These immigrants built German-speaking
institutions alongside English and other immigrant language
institutions, allowing for the presence of German in many Wisconsin
communities over several generations, along with a desire to
preserve local history and heritage in the region. These practices
are reflected in an archival record that allows for the study of
features of local German and English over a period of 150 years.
This chapter focuses on two such features, namely variation of voice
onset time and final obstruent neutralization. A combination of
historical written sources (spanning between the 1860s and the
1940s) and audio recordings from the 1940s and 2013 shows the
existence of these features, as well as different periods along
their development over time. This study looks at how language
acquisition in heritage language communities and shifts in language
dominance may have played a role in the emergence and development of
these features in Wisconsin German and Wisconsin English
varieties.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Sociohistorical background
- 3.Data sources
- 4.Voice onset time
- 4.1VOT in audio data
- 4.2VOT in written sources
- 5.Final obstruent neutralization
- 5.1FON in audio data
- 5.2FON in written sources
- 6.Language dominance
- 6.1Language dominance and non-standard VOT and FON forms in spoken and written data
- 6.2A closer look at the written data
- 7.Language acquisition and the historical sociolinguistics of VOT and FON in Wisconsin German and English
- 8.Conclusion
Acknowledgements Notes References
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