10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ISOGLOSSIC»
Discover the use of
isoglossic in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
isoglossic and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Dialectology as Dialectic: Interpreting Phula Variation
Baileyan dialectology and the dynamic wave model The so-called 'wave model'
has traditionally been used for conceptualizing overlapping isoglossic
innovations between related dialects or languages – sometimes in order to draw
attention ...
2
Polygenesis, Convergence, and Entropy: An Alternative Model ...
4.4.8 Case study: Isoglossic overlapping in Aramaic (Boyarin 1981) Looking
more closely at one branch of Semitic, namely Aramaic, we find a number of
morphological isoglosses which cannot be traced back to a common source -
whether an ...
3
American Dialect Research
Only recently have dialectologists begun asking what really underlies the
isoglossic boundary. Traditional dialectologists, as if to avoid encountering such
questions, restricted their data to single tokens of single utterances: the isogloss,
...
4
The Oxford History of English
It should be noted, however, that although a number of these atlases are
isoglossic, the lines which they contain do not imply the existence of areas within
which features are contained. Trudgill (1999) does use the concept of the 'dialect
area' ...
Not long ago some basic problems of dialectology were taken up by C.J. Bailey (
1980), who once again thoroughly criticised inadequacies in the isoglossic (
Wencker and followers) and atomistic (Gillieron) approaches from a variationist
point ...
Jacek Fisiak, Peter Trudgill, 2001
6
Luxembourgish Standardization: Context, Ideology and ...
Ever since Bruch and Goossens' enterprise of countrywide language sampling (
compiled into their 1963 Luxemburgischer Sprachatlas), a division into four main
isoglossic areas (northern, central, eastern, western) has been established ...
7
Aufsätze zur Variationstheorie
(This point, which goes hand in hand with 8, contrasts with the meagre
possibilities of isoglossic dialectology . ) l3. Cartological displays operate against
their goals of displaying variation, since the merest style shift on the part of a
given ...
Charles James Nice Bailey, Cl Gdaniec, 1980
8
Analysing 21st Century British English: Conceptual and ...
It is a fascinating picture, and still seven years on has enough linguistic science
about it to match SED's peerless isoglossic maps from fifty years ago (Orton and
Wright 1974; Orton etal. 1978). Whether there could ever be another such
venture ...
Clive Upton, Bethan Davies, 2013
The isoglossic difference is that *r became z- and in Yalhong it developed further
into a voiceless lateral 1-. Also, Yalhong has changed its rhymes dramatically.
Gloss Yalhong E-cun En Proto-Kra 'ear' 10u”(A2) Oaa44 khe53-[a33 *k-ra A 'bee'
...
Anthony Diller, Jerry Edmondson, Yongxian Luo, 2004
10
London Literature, 1300–1380
Some very prominent Type II forms do disappear, but in most cases, these are not
testimony to dying dialect 'types' but to developments whose influence Samuels
unaccountably deprecates, a general isoglossic movement of northerly forms ...