Orderly obsolescence

IF 1 4区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS American Speech Pub Date : 2022-08-03 DOI:10.1215/00031283-10104915
Jeremy M. Needle, Sali A. Tagliamonte
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The loss of /hw/ in English in words like where and wheat is virtually complete in contemporary North American English, though /hw/ has lingered in Ontario, Canada. For vernacular speech from Almonte and Parry Sound, we analyze the decline of /hw/ in apparent time among individuals born from 1880s to the 1950s. We place these observations within the field of language obsolescence and suggest that Parry Sound and Almonte are examples of intermediate isolation, less profound than is typical in studies of dialect loss. Almonte retains /hw/ much longer than Parry Sound; this pattern parallels the greater share of /hw/-ful Scots and Irish speakers in Almonte’s early immigration, and accords with Parry Sound’s increased outside contact due to a rising tourism industry. Both communities uniformly exhibit more /hw/ in content words than function words as the feature recedes, to total absence for speakers born in the 1950s. This pattern corroborates the idea that “even linguistic features on the verge of extinction… will continue to retain diachronic patterns in systematic linguistic conditioning” (Jones & Tagliamonte, 2004).
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尽管/hw/在加拿大的安大略地区仍然存在,但在当代北美英语中,/hw/在where和wheat等词中的消失几乎是完全的。我们分析了19世纪80年代至50年代出生的人的方言中/hw/在表观时间上的下降。我们将这些观察结果放在语言过时的领域内,并认为Parry Sound和Almonte是中间隔离的例子,不如方言丧失研究中的典型例子那么深刻。Almonte保留/hw/的时间比Parry Sound长得多;这种模式与阿尔蒙特早期移民中说/hw/ full苏格兰语和爱尔兰语的人所占比例更大相吻合,也与帕里桑德由于旅游业的兴起而增加的外部接触相吻合。随着这一特征的消退,这两个群体都一致地在实词中呈现出比虚词更多的/hw/,对于出生于20世纪50年代的人来说,这一特征完全消失了。这一模式证实了“即使是濒临灭绝的语言特征……也会在系统的语言条件作用中继续保留历时模式”的观点(Jones & Tagliamonte, 2004)。
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来源期刊
American Speech
American Speech Multiple-
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: American Speech has been one of the foremost publications in its field since its founding in 1925. The journal is concerned principally with the English language in the Western Hemisphere, although articles dealing with English in other parts of the world, the influence of other languages by or on English, and linguistic theory are also published. The journal is not committed to any particular theoretical framework, and issues often contain contributions that appeal to a readership wider than the linguistic studies community. Regular features include a book review section and a “Miscellany” section devoted to brief essays and notes.
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