In:Handbook of Perceptual Dialectology: Volume 1
Edited by Dennis R. Preston
[Not in series HPD 1] 1999
► pp. vii–viii
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Published online: 15 October 1999
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.hpd1.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.hpd1.toc
Table of contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Series Editor’s Introduction
Acknowledgments
Introduction
I: The Dutch Contribution: ‘Little Arrows’1
Informant Classification of Dialects
Dialects
The Netherlands-German National Border as a Subjective Dialect Boundary
II: The Japanese Controversy: ‘Subjective’ and ‘Objective’37
Consciousness of Dialect Boundaries
Consciousness of Linguistic Boundaries and Actual Linguistic Boundaries
Dialect Consciousness and Dialect Divisions: Examples in the Nagano-Gifu Boundary
On Dialect Consciousness: Dialect Characteristics Given by Speakers
The Discussion Surrounding the Subjective Boundaries of Dialects
On the Value of Subjective Dialect Boundaries
Dialects and the Subjective Judgments of Speakers: Remarks on Controversial Methods
III: Images, Perceptions and Attitudes145
Classification of Dialects by Image: English and Japanese
Subjective Dialect Division in Great Britain
Geographical Perceptions of Japanese Dialect Regions
Mapping Nonlinguists’ Evaluations of Japanese Language Variation
The Perception of Post-Unification German Regional Speech
Variation and the Norm: Parisian Perceptions of Regional French
The Perception of Turkish Dialects
Regional Variation in Subjective Dialect Divisions in the United States
A View from the West: Perceptions of U.S. Dialects by Oregon Residents
“Welshness” and “Englishness” as Attitudinal Dimensions of English Language Varieties in Wales
Dialect Recognition
A Language Attitude Approach to the Perception of Regional Variety
References
Additional Readings
About the Contributors and Translators
Index
