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Standards and Variation in Urban Speech

Examples from Lowland Scots

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ISBN 9789027248787 (Eur) | EUR 105.00
ISBN 9781556197178 (USA) | USD 158.00
 
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Standards and Variation in Urban Speech is an examination and exploration of the aims and methods of sociolinguistic investigation, based on studies of Scottish urban speech. It criticially examines the implications of the notions ‘vernacular’, ‘standard language’, ‘Received Pronunciation’, ‘social class’, and ‘linguistic insecurity’. Through a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods using examples from comedians’ jokes, dialect poetry, formal and informal interviews, and personal narratives, the work illustrates the actual norms that speakers exemplify in various ways.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 28 November 2011
Table of Contents
“Macaulay has assembled an interesting collection of chapters that represent his long term commitment to delineating the varieties in the Lowland Scots speech community. Additionally, he has worked to apply this information to illuminate the larger issues of standards and variation in the global community.”
Cited by (19)

Cited by 19 other publications

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Miller, Catherine & Jacopo Falchetta
2021. Standardization and New Urban Vernaculars. In The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization,  pp. 713 ff. DOI logo
Beal, Joan
2020. “A received pronunciation”. In Late Modern English [Studies in Language Companion Series, 214],  pp. 21 ff. DOI logo
CALUDE, ANDREEA
2019. The use ofheapsas quantifier and intensifier in New Zealand English. English Language and Linguistics 23:3  pp. 531 ff. DOI logo
Douglas, Fiona
2019. English in Scotland. In The Handbook of World Englishes,  pp. 17 ff. DOI logo
Guerin, Emmanuelle, F. Neveu, B. Harmegnies, L. Hriba & S. Prévost
2018. Les « emprunts urbains contemporains » : une approche sociolinguistique d’un phénomène lexical. SHS Web of Conferences 46  pp. 05003 ff. DOI logo
Calude, Andreea S.
2017. Sociolinguistic variation at the grammatical/discourse level. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 22:3  pp. 429 ff. DOI logo
Hernández-Campoy, Juan M. & Juan A. Cutillas-Espinosa
2017. Canons in Media Language and Professional Voice. Complutense Journal of English Studies 25  pp. 49 ff. DOI logo
Schleef, Erik, Nicholas Flynn & William Barras
2017. Regional diversity in social perceptions of (ing). Language Variation and Change 29:1  pp. 29 ff. DOI logo
Schützler, Ole
2014. Vowel Variation in Scottish Standard English: Accent-Internal Differentiation or Anglicisation?. In Sociolinguistics in Scotland,  pp. 129 ff. DOI logo
Pinson, Mathilde
2009. Polysémie de HOW dans la King James Version. Anglophonia Caliban/Sigma 13 (26)  pp. 171 ff. DOI logo
Barbieri, Federica
2008. Patterns of age‐based linguistic variation in American English1. Journal of Sociolinguistics 12:1  pp. 58 ff. DOI logo
Davies, Catherine Evans
2007. Ronald K. S. Macaulay, Extremely common eloquence: Constructing Scottish identity through narrative. Language in Society 36:3  pp. 427 ff. DOI logo
Macaulay, Ronald
2004. Discourse Variation. In The Handbook of Language Variation and Change,  pp. 283 ff. DOI logo
Patrick, Peter L.
2004. The Speech Community. In The Handbook of Language Variation and Change,  pp. 573 ff. DOI logo
Macaulay, Ronald K.S.
1999. Dialect. In Handbook of Pragmatics,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2013. Reference Guide for Varieties of English. In A Dictionary of Varieties of English,  pp. 363 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2016. References. In Sociolinguistic Styles,  pp. 192 ff. DOI logo

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U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  97023074 | Marc record
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