The Dialects of English series provides concise, accessible, authoritative and up-to-date documentation for varieties of English, including English-based pidgins and creoles, from all over the English-speaking world. Written by experts who have conducted first-hand research, the volumes are the most obvious starting point for readers who would like to know more about a particular regional, urban or ethnic variety. The volumes follow a common structure, covering the context in which one clearly defined variety of English (or a number of closely related varieties) has been established as well as their phonetics and phonology, morphosyntax, lexis and social history. Each volume concludes with an annotated bibliography and some sample texts.

Previous volumes are listed below. Recent and forthcoming volumes are listed on the "Volumes" tab.

  • Robert McColl Millar, Northern and Insular Scots (2007)
  • David Deterding, Singapore English (2007)
  • Jennifer Hay, Margaret A. Maclagan & Elizabeth Gordon, New Zealand English (2008)
  • Sailaja Pingali, Indian English (2009)
  • Karen P. Corrigan, Irish English, Volume 1: Northern Ireland (2010)
  • Sandra Clarke, Newfoundland and Labrador English (2010)
  • Jane Setter, Cathy S. P. Wong & Brian H. S. Chan, Hong Kong English (2010)
  • Joan C. Beal, Lourdes Burbano Elizondo & Carmen Llamas, Urban North-Eastern English: Tyneside to Teeside (2012)
  • Urszula Clarke & Esther Asprey, West Midlands English: Birmingham and the Black Country (2012)

Advisory Board:

  • David Britain (University of Bern, Switzerland)
  • Kathryn Burridge (Monash University, Australia)
  • Jenny Cheshire (Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom)
  • Alexandra D'Arcy (University of Victoria, Canada)
  • Lisa Lim (The University of Hong Kong, China)
  • Rajend Mesthrie (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
  • Peter L. Patrick (University of Essex, United Kingdom)
  • Peter Trudgill (University of Fribourg, Switzerland)
  • Walt Wolfram (North Carolina State University, USA)

To discuss your book idea or submit a proposal, please contact Natalie Fecher.

For further publications in English linguistics see also our Topics in English Linguistics book series.



Autorentext

B. Johnstone, Carnegie Mellon U.; D. Baumgardt, U. of Wisconsin; S. Kiesling, U. of Pittsburgh; M. Eberhardt, U. of Vermont.



Klappentext

Linguists have sporadically noted peculiarities of pronunciation, lexis and morphosyntax in the speech of European Americans in the Pittsburgh area, and Pittsburgh speech, locally known as "Pittsburghese", has been a topic of discussion in the Pittsburgh area for decades. This variety has never before been systematically documented, however. The first and only scholarly book to describe Pittsburgh-area varieties of English, Pittsburgh Speech and Pittsburghese is an essential reference tool for anyone studying the dialect of the Pittsburgh area and the only textbook choice for anyone teaching about it.

Titel
Pittsburgh Speech and Pittsburghese
EAN
9781614511786
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Hersteller
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Dateigrösse
2.04 MB
Anzahl Seiten
124