What is the difference between We goes to Bristol, and We do go to Bristol? Why do some English speakers say I'm gonna get some money? This major collection consists of 15 articles by an international group of linguists and 7 essays by the editors, tackling a broad range of issues and representing some of the best and most recent work in English dialect grammar.
What is the difference between We goes to Bristol, and We do go to Bristol? Why do some English speakers say I'm gonna get some money? This major collection consists of 15 articles by an international group of linguists and 7 essays by the editors, tackling a broad range of issues and representing some of the best and most recent work in English dialect grammar.
SourcesMapsAcknowledgements1. English dialect grammar2. Pronouns and pronominal systems in English dialects3. The personal dative in Appalachian speech, Donna Christian 4. Demonstrative adjectives and pronouns in a Devonshire dialect, Martin Harris 5. The actuation problem for gender change in Wessex versus Newfoundland, Harold Paddock 6. Verb systems in English dialects7. Variation in the use of ain't in an urban English dialect, Jenny Cheshire 8. Double modals in Hawick Scots,Keith Brown 9. On grammatical diffusion in Somerset folk speech, Ossi Ihalainen 10. Variation in the lexical verb in inner-Sydney English, Edina Eisikovits 11. Aspects in English dialects12. Periphrasic do in affirmative sentences in the dialect of East Somerset, Ossi Ihalainen 13. Preverbal done in Alabam and elsewhere, Crawford Feagin 14. Conservatism versus substratal transfer in Irish English, John Harris 15. Non-finite verb forms in English dialects16. Transitivity and intransitivity in the dialects of the south-west of England, Jean-Marc Gachelin 17. Toward a description of a-prefixing in Appalachian English, Walt Wolfram 18. A grammatical continuum for (ing), Ann Houston 19. Adverbials in English dialects 20. Affirmative any more in present-day American English, Walter H.Eitner 21. The boundaries of a grammar - inter-dialectal reactions to positive anymore, William Labov 22. Dialect and grammar - data and theory
SourcesMapsAcknowledgements1. English dialect grammar2. Pronouns and pronominal systems in English dialects3. The personal dative in Appalachian speech, Donna Christian 4. Demonstrative adjectives and pronouns in a Devonshire dialect, Martin Harris 5. The actuation problem for gender change in Wessex versus Newfoundland, Harold Paddock 6. Verb systems in English dialects7. Variation in the use of ain't in an urban English dialect, Jenny Cheshire 8. Double modals in Hawick Scots,Keith Brown 9. On grammatical diffusion in Somerset folk speech, Ossi Ihalainen 10. Variation in the lexical verb in inner-Sydney English, Edina Eisikovits 11. Aspects in English dialects12. Periphrasic do in affirmative sentences in the dialect of East Somerset, Ossi Ihalainen 13. Preverbal done in Alabam and elsewhere, Crawford Feagin 14. Conservatism versus substratal transfer in Irish English, John Harris 15. Non-finite verb forms in English dialects16. Transitivity and intransitivity in the dialects of the south-west of England, Jean-Marc Gachelin 17. Toward a description of a-prefixing in Appalachian English, Walt Wolfram 18. A grammatical continuum for (ing), Ann Houston 19. Adverbials in English dialects 20. Affirmative any more in present-day American English, Walter H.Eitner 21. The boundaries of a grammar - inter-dialectal reactions to positive anymore, William Labov 22. Dialect and grammar - data and theory
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