Descriptor
| Language Variation | 2 |
| Linguistic Theory | 2 |
| Athapascan Languages | 1 |
| Consonants | 1 |
| Cree | 1 |
| Language Planning | 1 |
| Lower Class | 1 |
| Ojibwa | 1 |
| Phonology | 1 |
| Social Class | 1 |
| Social Dialects | 1 |
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| Language in Society | 2 |
Author
| Cook, Eung-Do | 1 |
| Kroch, Anthony S. | 1 |
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| Information Analyses | 1 |
| Journal Articles | 1 |
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Peer reviewedCook, Eung-Do – Language in Society, 1991
A theory that the consonant system of Chipewyan has been reduced from 39 to 16 segments, as influenced by Cree, was based on an incoherent and indiscriminate admixture of variable data; instead, there is evidence of intralinguistic divergence, not interlinguistic convergence, because the observed changes are those frequently observed in other…
Descriptors: Athapascan Languages, Consonants, Cree, Language Planning
Peer reviewedKroch, Anthony S. – Language in Society, 1978
Offers this proposal: (1) the public prestige dialect of the elite in a stratified community differs from the dialect(s) of the non-elite strata in at least one phonologically systematic way; (2) the cause of stratified phonological differentiation is to be sought not in purely linguistic factors but in ideology. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Language Variation, Linguistic Theory, Lower Class, Phonology


