A Language Suppressed: The Pronunciation of the Scots Language in the 18th CenturyJ.Donald Publishers, 1995 - 278 páginas |
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Página 79
... interesting , ' having a twang and twist of voice peculiar to us ' ( 1799 : 23 ) , although ' Mr Sheridan seems to carry to affectation the mixture of the i and ou , in Duke , diouk ' ( 1799 : 38 ) . The second sound of this graph is ...
... interesting , ' having a twang and twist of voice peculiar to us ' ( 1799 : 23 ) , although ' Mr Sheridan seems to carry to affectation the mixture of the i and ou , in Duke , diouk ' ( 1799 : 38 ) . The second sound of this graph is ...
Página 125
... interesting to note too that in The Contrast , Alexander Scot's orthography also seems to suggest just such a double low mid front vowel division . While his < ee > symbol seems unambiguously to point to [ e ( e ) ] values in ...
... interesting to note too that in The Contrast , Alexander Scot's orthography also seems to suggest just such a double low mid front vowel division . While his < ee > symbol seems unambiguously to point to [ e ( e ) ] values in ...
Página 172
... interesting to note that written in hand in the Edinburgh University Library copy of The Pronunciation of English , are < bone > / < bain > and < stone > / < stain > . Elphinston claims that ' Hence hear we , in colloquial Scotch ...
... interesting to note that written in hand in the Edinburgh University Library copy of The Pronunciation of English , are < bone > / < bain > and < stone > / < stain > . Elphinston claims that ' Hence hear we , in colloquial Scotch ...
Conteúdo
CHAPTER | 11 |
The Source Materials and the Nature of the Evidence | 22 |
CHAPTER 3 | 50 |
Direitos autorais | |
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18th century accent Adams alternation appear attempt Book broad Buchanan called characteristic claims close common consonantal consonants contemporary context contrast describes detail Dictionary difficult diphthong discussion distinction distinguished Edinburgh Elphinston England English Language entry especially evidence examples expressed fact final French Geddes give Grammar guttural hard instance interpretation James kind labial length letter lexical linguistic lists London manner marked means method native nature notably notes observers orthography palatal particular perhaps period phonetic phonology principle pronounced pronunciation proper provides provincial pure dialect realisation records represent respect rhyme rules Scotch Scotland Scots Scottish seems segments short similar sonorant sound speak speakers speech Spelling standard stressed suggest syllable Sylvester Douglas symbol terminations tongue true types vocal voice vowel words writing written