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Beal, Joan C. (4)
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Hits 1 – 5 of 5
1
"You're not from New York City, you're from Rotherham" : dialect and identity in British indie music
Beal, Joan C.
In:
Journal of English linguistics. - Thousand Oaks, Calif. [u.a.] : Sage
37 (2009) 3, 223-240
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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2
Review
Kendall, Tyler
;
Beal, Joan C
;
Corrigan, Karen P
...
In:
Language in society. - London [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press
38 (2009) 1, 134
OLC Linguistik
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3
Charlotte Brewer: Treasure-house of the language: the living OED. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 2007. Pp. xiv. 334 [Rezension]
Beal, Joan C.
In:
Historiographia linguistica. - Amsterdam : Benjamins
36 (2009) 1, 163-167
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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4
Pronouncing dictionaries, 1, Eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
Beal, Joan C.
In:
The Oxford history of English lexicography ; 2. Specialized dictionaries. - Oxford : Clarendon Press
(2009), 149-175
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5
ENREGISTERMENT, COMMODIFICATION, AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT: "GEORDIE" VERSUS "SHEFFIELDISH"
Beal, Joan C.
. - : Duke University Press, 2009
Abstract:
This article examines a range of texts from nineteenth-century Newcastle and Sheffield, both in the north of England, to demonstrate how the urban dialects of these cities, known respectively as “Geordie” and “Sheffieldish,” became enregistered in this period. Features that were actually more widespread in the north of England and in Scotland were “claimed” as unique to each of these new urban dialects, and in each case, a repertoire of features emerged that continues to be cited and indeed used by speakers and writers today, albeit often in performative contexts. The article goes on to consider how awareness of a distinct “Geordie” accent/dialect arrived much earlier and became more widespread than that of “Sheffieldish” and how this is reflected in the commodification of the former but not the latter.
Keyword:
Enregisterment
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1215/00031283-2009-012
http://americanspeech.dukejournals.org/cgi/content/short/84/2/138
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