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Variation and change at the interface of syntax and semantics : Concessive conjunctions in American English
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Schützler, Ole. - : John Benjamins, 2021. : Amsterdam, 2021. : Philadelphia, 2021
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Issues of corpus comparability and register variation in the International Corpus of English: Theories and computer applications
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Vetter, Fabian. - : Otto-Friedrich-Universität, 2021. : Bamberg, 2021. : "SPLIT", 2021
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Frequency changes and stylistic levelling of though in diachronic and synchronic varieties of English – linguistic democratisation?
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A corpus-based study of concessive conjunctions in three L1-varieties of English
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New perspectives on Scottish Standard English: Introducing the Scottish component of the International Corpus of English
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Concessive conjunctions in written American English : Diachronic and genre-related changes in frequency and semantics
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Grammaticalisation and information structure : two perspectives on diachronic changes of 'notwithstanding' in written American English
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Which WAY do Scottish monophthongs GO? : Charting vowel variation in Scottish Standard English
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Transforming acoustic vowel data : A comparison of methods, using multi-dimensional scaling
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Statistical approaches to hierarchical data in sociophonetics: The case of variable rhoticity in Scottish Standard English
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The sociophonology and sociophonetics of Scottish Standard English (r)
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Abstract:
This paper inspects the variability of (r) in non-linking coda positions (e.g. in the words car, far, and art) in Scottish Standard English (SSE), accepting the three variants [ɾ], [ɹ], and Ø. Interviews with 27 middle-class speakers were conducted, eliciting three styles (careful speech, reading passage, and word list). Following a discussion of previous research on (r) in SSE and an explanation of the conditional hierarchical logistic regression model applied to the data, results are presented with a focus on social and stylistic factors. It appears that female speakers are more likely to vocalise /r/, and older speakers are more likely to use the more traditional tapped variant [ɾ]. Thus, quasi-phonological variation correlates with gender, and phonetic variation correlates with age. Moreover, contact with Southern Standard British English (SSBE) also increases the rates of (r)-vocalisation. In word list style, all speakers are less likely to vocalise (r), but there are significant differences between social groups in this respect: especially young men’s accents are almost categorically rhotic in word list style.
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Keyword:
Rhoticity; Scottish English; Sociophonetics
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URL: https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/39226
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Vowel variation in Scottish Standard English : Accent-internal differentiation or anglicisation?
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Schützler, Ole. - : Palgrave Macmillan, 2019. : Basingstoke [u.a.], 2019
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Patterns of linguistic globalization : Integrating typological profiles and questionnaire data
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Regional (in-)variability of vowel space organisation in Scottish Standard English
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Variable Scottish English consonants: The cases of /ʍ/ and non-prevocalic /r/
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