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Baugh, John – 1979
A corpus of Black English (BEV) data is re-examined with exclusive attention to the "is" form of the copula. This analysis differs from previous examinations in that more constraints have been introduced, and the Cedergren/Sankoff computer program for multivariant analysis has been employed. The analytic techniques that are used allow for a finer…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Dialect Studies, Language Usage, Language Variation
Coles, Felice Anne – 1992
The pronunciation and use of /s/ in the isleno dialect of Spanish, a dying language spoken in a small ethnic enclave in southeast Louisiana, is examined. Today, there are fewer than 20 fluent speakers of isleno Spanish, which has been described as a fossilized derivative of the speech of Canary Island peasants with additions from Spanish sailors.…
Descriptors: Dialect Studies, Language Fluency, Language Usage, Language Variation
Giron, Robert LeRoy – 1982
A study was undertaken to gather attitudes of Spanish-speakers toward specific types of Chicano Spanish dialect lexical items. Reactions were randomly taken from 11 Latin American students who attended Southern Illinois University at Carbondale during the 1975 spring semester; 20 Mexican residents of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, who attended English as…
Descriptors: Dialect Studies, Language Attitudes, Language Variation, Regional Dialects
Birmingham, John C., Jr. – 1976
It seems highly likely that many of the features of Black American English can be traced back to the Afro-Portuguese Creole dialects that sprang up in the fifteenth century in Portuguese slave camps along the West African coast, particularly in the Gulf of Guinea area, the area of greatest concentration of activity during the slave trade. This…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Creoles, Diachronic Linguistics, Dialect Studies
Homma, Yayoi – 1975
One characteristic of Japanese pitch accent is that there is the so-called "flat" accent, which has no fall or nucleus. This type of accent exists not only in Standard Japanese but in many dialects, including Kyoto. But the flat types are different in the Tokyo and Kyoto dialects. In the Tokyo dialect, the first syllable always has a low…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Dialect Studies, Intonation, Japanese
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Rochet, Bernard – 1975
Among the characteristics which set Bordeaux French apart from Standard French are the rules governing the behavior of its mid-vowels. These rules are much simpler and more extensive (in that they also apply to unstressed vowels) than in Standard French. Their application is, however, systematically conditioned by the presence or absence of word…
Descriptors: Dialect Studies, French, Language Standardization, Language Variation
Pfaff, Carol W. – 1975
This paper reports on a preliminary quantitative study of syntactic constraints on code-switching within discourses in which no change in participants, setting or topic is evident. The goals of the study are to provide a syntactic description of the points at which switches from Spanish to English and English to Spanish are possible and to assess…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language), Dialect Studies
Breen, Walter – 1988
An analysis of Korean case marking proposes an explanation for several aspects of marking, especially stacking and spreading, from a lexical perspective. The explanation has advantages over previous theories in that (1) it explains the morphology of Korean case marking without reference to several levels of syntactic derivation, including…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Dialect Studies, Grammar, Korean
Frazer, Timothy C.; Livingston-Webber, Joan – 1992
Students of English around the world are commonly taught according to one of two models, "British" English, and "American" English. Indeed, there is a persistent popular myth (present in many linguistics and second-language texts) that a single "Midwestern" variety of American English exists. The usage of the term…
Descriptors: Dialect Studies, Higher Education, Language Variation, Linguistics
Kochman, Thomas – 1983
To be culturally valid, the characteristics identified by dialectologists as distinctive of black English must correspond to the terms members of the black community use to characterize their speech. Not all of the patterns that characterize black English within the dialectal framework are equal in their social or ethnic significance--the speech…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Black Culture, Black Dialects, Cultural Awareness
Merrill, Celia – 1977
This paper describes a method for determining whether the language variations of Spanish-English bilingual speakers are anomalous, idiosyncratic, or truly dialectical, and reports the testing of that method. Elements of the method include presenting sentences that have grammatical/syntactic language variations, having subjects perform operational…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Bilingualism, Contrastive Linguistics, Dialect Studies
Terrebonne, Nancy G.; Terrebonne, Robert A. – 1976
The occurrence of Black English Venacular (BEV) dialect features in the writing of 42 inner-city college students was studied using such sociolinguistic methods as variable rule analysis, computer programs, and implicational scales. A comparison of the patterns found in the subjects' writing with those found in spoken BEV revealed that sometimes,…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Dialect Studies, Higher Education
Guitart, Jorge M. – 1977
Two studies on the phonology of Spanish spoken by Cubans in the United States are critically analyzed. The studies are: "Markedness and a Cuban Dialect of Spanish," by Jorge M. Guitart, and "Some Theoretical Implications from Rapid Speech Phenomena in Miami-Cuban Spanish," by Robert M. Hammond. The methodologies of Hammond and Guitart are…
Descriptors: Consonants, Cubans, Dialect Studies, Dialects
Bloom, Leonard – 1977
Numerous reasons can be cited by scholars concerning lexical problems that face anyone embarking upon such an enterprise as that of preparing a Basque-English dictionary. First, "euskera," a term given to this ancient tongue, is both written and spoken today as it was millennia ago. Second, Basque, as a result, has not been subjected to…
Descriptors: Basque, Dialect Studies, Dialects, Dictionaries
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Adamson, Anita – 1971
Drawing on phonological, grammatical, and usage data collected during personal interviews and taped sessions, this paper seeks to determine whether and how persons of Finnish descent, collectively or individually by generation, constitute dialect islands within the local dialect area (Marquette, Michigan), and their effect upon one another. The…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Dialect Studies, Dialects, Diglossia
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