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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Language Variation – European Perspectives

Selected papers from the Third International Conference on Language Variation in Europe (ICLaVE 3), Amsterdam, June 2005

Edited by Frans Hinskens
Meertens Instituut & Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam

2006. vi, 279 pp.
Publishing status: Available

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978 90 272 3481 0 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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978 90 272 9312 1 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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This volume presents 16 original studies of variation in languages representing the three main European language families, as well as in varieties of Greek and Hungarian. The studies concern variation in or across dialects or dialect groups, in standard varieties or in emerging regional varieties of the standard. Several studies investigate a specific linguistic element or structure, while others focus on areas of tension between variation and prescriptive standard norms, on regional standard varieties and regiolects, on problems of linguistic classification (from folk linguistic or dialect geographical perspectives) and the classification of speakers. Language acquisition plays a main role in three studies. The studies in this volume represent a range of methods, including ethnographic and 'interpretative' approaches, conversation analysis, analyses of the internal and geographical distribution of dialect features, the classification and quantitative analyses of socio-demographic speaker background data, quantitative analyses of both diachronic and synchronic language data, phonetic measurements, as well as (quasi-)experimental perception studies. The volume thus offers a microcosmic reflection of the macrocosmos of world-wide research on variability in (originally) European languages at the beginning of the 21th century and the linguistic expression of cultural diversity.


Table of contents

Twenty-five authors on twelve languages, sixteen language varieties, and eighteen hundred and eighty-eight speakers
Frans Hinskens
1–7
Phrasal Verbs in Venetan and Regional Italian
Paola Benincà and Cecilia Poletto
9–22
Regional variation in intonation. Nuclear rising-falling contours in Cologne German
Pia Bergmann
23–36
Internal and external factors for clitic-shape variation in North-Eastern Catalan
Elisenda Campmany
37–51
The native / non-native speaker distinction and the diversity of linguistics of young people in Swedish multilingual urban contexts
Kari Fraurud and Sally Boyd
53–69
Language acquisition in a multilingual society: a case study in Veneto, Italy
Anna Ghimenton and Jean-Pierre Chevrot
71–81
Regional accent in the German language area. How dialectally do German police answer emergency calls?
Roland Kehrein
83–96
Sustainable Linguicism
Miklós Kontra
97–126
Phonetic variation in Tyneside: exploratory multivariate analysis of the Newcastle Electronic Corpus of Tyneside English
Hermann Moisl, Warren Maguire and Will Allen
127–141
Production and judgment in childhood: the case of liaison in French
Aurélie Nardy and Stéphanie Barbu
143–152
Stereotypes and /n/ variation in Patra, Greece: results from a pilot study
Panayiotis A. Pappas
153–167
Modelling linguistic change. The past and the present of the future in Brazilian Portuguese
Shana Poplack and Elisabete Malvar
169–199
The role of linguistic factors in the process of second dialect acquisition
Kathy Rys and Dries Bonte
201–215
Folk views on linguistic variation and identities in the Belarusian-Russian borderland
Marián Sloboda
217–231
Polarisation revisited
Johan Taeldeman
233–248
Ethnicity as a source of changes in the London vowel system
Eivind Torgersen, Paul Kerswill and Susan Fox
249–263
Levelling, koineization and their implications for bidialectism
Stavroula Tsiplakou, Andreas Papapavlou, Pavlos Pavlou and Marianna Katsoyannou
265–276
Subject index
277–279