First approaches to an underexplored dialect region: Trudgill’s Upper Southwest

Author:

Asprey Esther1,Jeffries Ella2,Kailoglou Eleftherios3

Affiliation:

1. Esther Asprey University of Wolverhampton Wolverhampton England

2. Ella Jeffries University of Essex Essex England

3. Eleftherios Kailoglou University of Worcester Worcester England

Abstract

Abstract Although dialectology in England received two major boosts at the end of the 19th century and the middle of the 20th century (Ellis 1889 and Orton & Barry 1956-8), discussion of dialect change since that time has avoided discussion of many areas, concentrated as it was in those Universities with a tradition of dialectology (Essex, Leeds, Sheffield, Newcastle). Though many areas have since been re-examined in England; notably Bristol dialect (Blaxter & Coates 2019), Newcastle dialect (Milroy 1994, Milroy et al. 1999) Sunderland dialect (Burbano-Elizondo 2007), and Manchester dialect (Baranowski & Turton 2015, Bermúdez-Otero et al. 2015) there remain many areas which were never fully explored at the time of the Survey of English Dialects (Birmingham as an urban area for example was completely bypassed by that survey), as well as many areas which remain little known and studied. This paper brings together what is known about the dialects of the Upper Southwest and suggests pointers for directions in future research there based on the data from Worcestershire and Herefordshire that we discuss.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference49 articles.

1. (Æ) An Atlas of Alexander J. Ellis’s The Existing Phonology of English Dialects. Available online at http://www.lel.ed.ac.uk/EllisAtlas/About.html (acc. Oct. 10, 2019).

2. Asprey, Esther & Robert Lawson. 2019. The FOOT/STRUT split in the city of Birmingham: an acoustic analysis. Conference paper presented at ICLAVE| 10: International Conference on Language Variation in Europe. The Fryske Akademy, Leeuwarden, 27th June 2019.

3. Baranowski, Maciej & Danielle Turton. 2015. Manchester English. In Researching Northern Englishes, 293–316 ed. Raymond Hickey. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.

4. Blaxter, Tam & Richard Coates. 2019. The TRAP–BATH split in Bristol English. English Language and Linguistics 23:1–38.

5. Blaxter, Tam, Kate Beeching, Richard Coates & James Murphy. 2019. Each p[ɚ]son does it th[εː] way: Rhoticity variation and the community grammar. Language Variation and Change 31:91–117.

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