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Individuals, communities, and sound change: an introduction
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In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 6, No 1 (2021); 67 ; 2397-1835 (2021)
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The Lothian Diary Project: Investigating the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Edinburgh and Lothian Residents
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In: Journal of Open Humanities Data; Vol 7 (2021); 4 ; 2059-481X (2021)
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H-deletion and H-insertion in Nigerian Englishes: their sociolinguistic and extralinguistic constraints and their enregisterment as the ‘H-factor’
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It's all about the interaction: listener responses as a discourse-organisational variable
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Breksit or Bregzit: When Political Ideology Drives Language Ideology
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In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2020)
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Cross-linguistic variation of /s/ as an index of non-normative sexual orientation and masculinity in French and German men
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Boyd, Zac. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2018
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Sociolinguistic variation among Slovak immigrants in Edinburgh, Scotland
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Sound change and social meaning: the perception and production of phonetic change in York, Northern England
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Accommodation or political identity: Scottish members of the UK Parliament
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Abstract:
Item also deposited in University of Edinburgh (Edinburgh Research Explorer) repository, available at: https://www.research.ed.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/accommodation-or-political-identity(b85753d3-9059-40c0-ae2c-8c5bcc9da890).html ; Phonetic variation among Scottish Members of the UK Parliament may be influenced by convergence to Southern English norms (Carr & Brulard 2006) or political identity (e.g., Hall-Lew, Coppock & Starr 2010). Drawing on a year's worth of political speeches (2011- 2012) from ten Scottish Members of the UK Parliament (MPs), we find no acoustic evidence for the adoption of a Southern English low vowel system; rather, we find that vowel height is significantly correlated with political party: Scottish Labour Party MPs produce a higher 'CAT' vowel (Johnston 1997) than do Scottish National Party MPs. The results contradict claims that Scottish MPs acquire 'Anglo-English' features while at UK Parliament. Rather, we suggest that the variation indexes political meaning, with a subset of individuals drawing on that indexicality in production. ; This research was supported by a British Academy Small Grant (SG130396), with funds from the Leverhulme Foundation, and also by a Small Grant from the Royal Society of Edinburgh. ; casl ; 29 ; pub ; 4886 ; pub ; 3
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URL: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12289/4886 https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/4886 https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954394517000175 http://10.1017/S0954394517000175
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Phonetic Variation and Self-Recorded Data
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In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2017)
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Phonetic and lexical realisations of style shift and identity alignment by Shetland dialect speakers: a topic approach ; Dey hae a reffelled hesp ta redd
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Fitting in: Migrants' Acquisition of Sociolinguistic Variation in Edinburgh English
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As Queer as a Nine Bob Note ; A Metalinguistic Investigation into How Interlocutors Affect Queer Speakers’ Presentations of Identities in Speech
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Talking Teenaged Toonie ; A study into factors influencing dialect usage in Lerwick, Shetland
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