In:Language Variation - European Perspectives VII: Selected papers from the Ninth International Conference on Language Variation in Europe (ICLaVE 9), Malaga, June 2017
Edited by Juan-Andrés Villena-Ponsoda, Francisco Díaz Montesinos, Antonio Manuel Ávila-Muñoz and Matilde Vida-Castro
[Studies in Language Variation 22] 2019
► pp. 159–174
Chapter 10Slit-t in Dublin English
Published online: 12 December 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.22.10odw
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.22.10odw
Abstract
The paper presents an analysis of speakers in
Dublin, Ireland who align themselves with an authoritative
interactional identity by realising a slit-t variant. A
statistical analysis is first presented and then salient
patterns of variation are discussed before proceeding to a
qualitative evaluation. The latter highlights the
discourse functions clustering around the slit-t
occurrences, which indicate that a speaker will adopt a
sociopragmatic position, like emphasizing a point. My
interpretations characterize the interactions where slit-t
tokens are found as epistemically-based, inferring how
speakers position themselves and others. The conclusions
include a discussion of how ethnographically informed,
qualitatively-skewed mixed methods can elucidate the
social meaning of linguistic variants.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction: Slit-t in Dublin English
- 2.Club Fingal and wider context
- 2.1The data
- 3.Analysis of word-final /t/
- 3.1Salient patterns of variation in word-final /t/
- 4.The discourse functions of the word-final slit-t
variant
- 4.1Slit-t indicates speaker will adopt a sociopragmatic position
- 4.2Slit-t introduces a point of sociopragmatic weight
- 4.3Slit-t does sociopragmatic work, with a pause
- 4.4Slit-t to emphasise a point
- 5.Conclusion: Slit-t in Dublin English
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