Grammar
Tenses
Present
Present Simple
Present Continuous
Present Perfect
Present Perfect Continuous
Past
Past Continuous
Past Perfect
Past Perfect Continuous
Past Simple
Future
Future Simple
Future Continuous
Future Perfect
Future Perfect Continuous
Passive and Active
Parts Of Speech
Nouns
Countable and uncountable nouns
Verbal nouns
Singular and Plural nouns
Proper nouns
Nouns gender
Nouns definition
Concrete nouns
Abstract nouns
Common nouns
Collective nouns
Definition Of Nouns
Verbs
Stative and dynamic verbs
Finite and nonfinite verbs
To be verbs
Transitive and intransitive verbs
Auxiliary verbs
Modal verbs
Regular and irregular verbs
Action verbs
Adverbs
Relative adverbs
Interrogative adverbs
Adverbs of time
Adverbs of place
Adverbs of reason
Adverbs of quantity
Adverbs of manner
Adverbs of frequency
Adverbs of affirmation
Adjectives
Quantitative adjective
Proper adjective
Possessive adjective
Numeral adjective
Interrogative adjective
Distributive adjective
Descriptive adjective
Demonstrative adjective
Pronouns
Subject pronoun
Relative pronoun
Reflexive pronoun
Reciprocal pronoun
Possessive pronoun
Personal pronoun
Interrogative pronoun
Indefinite pronoun
Emphatic pronoun
Distributive pronoun
Demonstrative pronoun
Pre Position
Preposition by function
Time preposition
Reason preposition
Possession preposition
Place preposition
Phrases preposition
Origin preposition
Measure preposition
Direction preposition
Contrast preposition
Agent preposition
Preposition by construction
Simple preposition
Phrase preposition
Double preposition
Compound preposition
Conjunctions
Subordinating conjunction
Correlative conjunction
Coordinating conjunction
Conjunctive adverbs
Interjections
Express calling interjection
Grammar Rules
Preference
Requests and offers
wishes
Be used to
Some and any
Could have done
Describing people
Giving advices
Possession
Comparative and superlative
Giving Reason
Making Suggestions
Apologizing
Forming questions
Since and for
Directions
Obligation
Adverbials
invitation
Articles
Imaginary condition
Zero conditional
First conditional
Second conditional
Third conditional
Reported speech
Linguistics
Phonetics
Phonology
Semantics
Pragmatics
Linguistics fields
Syntax
Morphology
Semantics
pragmatics
History
Writing
Grammar
Phonetics and Phonology
Reading Comprehension
Elementary
Intermediate
Advanced
Dialectology
المؤلف: David Hornsby
المصدر: Linguistics A complete introduction
الجزء والصفحة: 223-11
2024-01-01
644
Dialectology
Dialectology, the study of geographical differences within the same language, has a long tradition that predates modern linguistics. In the nineteenth century in particular, data from the local and regional dialects of Europe were collected with a view to establishing language families and identifying the branches of family trees (sometimes, it must be said, from nationalistic rather than purely scientific motives).
In the absence of reliable recording equipment, obtaining information about how language varied from one place to another was difficult, and researchers were often reliant on impressionistic data collated from non-specialists. Marburg-based dialectologist Georg Wenker’s early attempts to document spoken dialect across Germany, for example, were based on some 45,000 questionnaires returned from schoolmasters between 1877 and 1887: the sheer volume of data meant that only a fraction of Wenker’s corpus was ever properly exploited.
In the last decade of the nineteenth century Jules Gilliéron attempted to obtain more reliable first-hand data by training a grocer, Edmond Edmont, to conduct dialectological interviews with informants in 639 rural French villages, using a simple pre-IPA transcription system to record his results. Edmont’s findings were published as the Atlas Linguistique de la France (ALF; ‘Linguistic Atlas of France’) between 1902 and 1910. Half a century later, a team of researchers led by Harold Orton at the University of Leeds used similar methodology to Gilliéron, and again focused largely (though not exclusively) on rural villages for the Survey of English Dialects (SED), published between 1962 and 1971. The detailed data on local variation in each of these surveys have been presented as dialect maps, and in some cases isoglosses have been drawn, separating areas using one form from areas using a different one for the same referent (see the example for the verb ‘to peep’ in Figure 11.1).
It is important to remember that the primary aim of the dialectological surveys was to collect and record local variants before they died out, not to provide an accurate snapshot of variation throughout the country. The bias towards rural English villages in the SED, for example, was consistent with the aim of locating conservative speech forms, but entirely unrepresentative of a country which had been predominantly urban since the mid-nineteenth century. The informants selected, similarly, were anything but a representative cross-section of the English population at the time. Because of their associations with traditional (and often dying) trades, and the specialist vocabulary that went with them, NORMs (non-mobile older rural males) were targeted as ideal SED informants, as they had been by the ALF, for which only 60 out of some 700 informants were female.