A Language Suppressed: The Pronunciation of the Scots Language in the 18th CenturyJ.Donald Publishers, 1995 - 278 páginas |
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Página 149
... Sylvester Douglas also identifies what he describes as ' another shade ' of the smothered u vowel . From the number of lexical items Douglas associates with this labial , it would appear to be for him the most common type in this area ...
... Sylvester Douglas also identifies what he describes as ' another shade ' of the smothered u vowel . From the number of lexical items Douglas associates with this labial , it would appear to be for him the most common type in this area ...
Página 222
... Sylvester Douglas , not unlike Elphinston - who records ' Fecles dhus varied featles , in dhe sense ov hwat dhe Scotch name also dooingless . By oppozite chainge proovs carracter carratter in ( dhe West ov ) Scotland ( 1786 : 24 ) ...
... Sylvester Douglas , not unlike Elphinston - who records ' Fecles dhus varied featles , in dhe sense ov hwat dhe Scotch name also dooingless . By oppozite chainge proovs carracter carratter in ( dhe West ov ) Scotland ( 1786 : 24 ) ...
Página 227
... Sylvester Douglas claims that the voiceless obstruent [ p ] in the pure dialect item < trumps > is made continuant ( more vowel like ) in the Scotch version pronounced ' as if written trumphs ' ( Jones : 1992 : 230 ) . It is interesting ...
... Sylvester Douglas claims that the voiceless obstruent [ p ] in the pure dialect item < trumps > is made continuant ( more vowel like ) in the Scotch version pronounced ' as if written trumphs ' ( Jones : 1992 : 230 ) . It is interesting ...
Conteúdo
CHAPTER | 1 |
CHAPTER | 11 |
The Source Materials and the Nature of the Evidence | 22 |
Direitos autorais | |
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Termos e frases comuns
18th century Scots accent Adams Alexander Geddes Alexander Scot Alphabet alternation appear aund broad Buchanan characteristic consonants context contrast describes dhat dhe Inglish dhe Scotch digraph diphthongal sound distinction distinguished Edinburgh Elphinston English Language English Vowel Shift entry French fricative Grammar graph guttural homophonous instance kind labial letter lexical diffusion lexical items linguistic list of words London long sound marked Menston mid vowel monophthongal notably observers obstruent orthography ov dhe perhaps phonaesthetic phonetic phonetic value phonology pronunciation provincial pure dialect pure palatal realisation recognises records represent rhyme Scot's Scotch dialect Scotland Scots language Scots speakers Scottish Scottish English semivowel Sheridan short sound sic:CJ slender sonorant speech Spelling Book Spelling-Book standard stress placement stressed vowel suggest syllable division syllable final syllable onsets Sylvester Douglas terminations thaut types vernacular vocal voice voiceless vowel length vowel sound vowel space Walker widh writing