A Language Suppressed: The Pronunciation of the Scots Language in the 18th CenturyJ.Donald Publishers, 1995 - 278 páginas |
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... linguistic scholarly tradition , and what we have claimed for early period bias in the English materials is , if anything , even more pronounced in Scots language studies . Despite the fact that the 18th century in Scotland saw a major ...
... linguistic scholarly tradition , and what we have claimed for early period bias in the English materials is , if anything , even more pronounced in Scots language studies . Despite the fact that the 18th century in Scotland saw a major ...
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... linguistic observers who , in their different ways , profess to be both patriotic Scotsmen as well as strong supporters of political Union with England . They highlight the dilemma Scots writers and observers of the language faced ...
... linguistic observers who , in their different ways , profess to be both patriotic Scotsmen as well as strong supporters of political Union with England . They highlight the dilemma Scots writers and observers of the language faced ...
Página 22
... linguistic description , it only reflects the almost obsessional characteristic of 18th century linguistic scholarship for linguistic normalisation , dialect suppression and the pedagogic methodology required to eliminate linguistic non ...
... linguistic description , it only reflects the almost obsessional characteristic of 18th century linguistic scholarship for linguistic normalisation , dialect suppression and the pedagogic methodology required to eliminate linguistic non ...
Conteúdo
CHAPTER | 11 |
The Source Materials and the Nature of the Evidence | 22 |
CHAPTER 3 | 50 |
Direitos autorais | |
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Termos e frases comuns
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