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New-Dialect Formation: The Inevitability of Colonial Englishes

2004· book· en· 796 citations· W1520637587 on OpenAlex· 10.1515/9780748626410

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About CanadaIts subject is Canada, wherever its authors sit.

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Abstract

This book presents a new and controversial theory about dialect contact and the formation of new colonial dialects. It examines the genesis of Latin American Spanish, Canadian French and North American English, but concentrates on Australian and South African English, with a particular emphasis on the development of the newest major variety of the language, New Zealand English. Peter Trudgill argues that the linguistic growth of these new varieties of English was essentially deterministic, in the sense that their phonologies are the predictable outcome of the mixture of dialects taken from the British Isles to the Southern Hemisphere in the 19th century. These varieties are similar to one another, not because of historical connections between them, but because they were formed out of similar mixtures according to the same principles. A key argument is that social factors such as social status, prestige and stigma played no role in the early years of colonial dialect development, and that the 'work' of colonial new-dialect formation was carried out by children over a period of two generations. The book also uses insights derived from the study of early forms of these colonial dialects to shed light back on the nature of 19th-century English in the British Isles

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The record

Venue
Topic
Linguistic Variation and Morphology
Field
Social Sciences
Canadian institutions
Funders
Keywords
ColonialismPrestigeVariety (cybernetics)HistoryArgument (complex analysis)Early Modern EnglishGeographyLinguisticsEthnologyLiteratureClassicsArtArchaeologyPhilosophy
Has abstract in OpenAlex
yes