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Accents of English: Volume 1
Accents of English is about the way English is pronounced by different people in different places.
John C. Wells (Author)
9780521297196, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 8 April 1982
300 pages
21.7 x 13.9 x 1.8 cm, 0.37 kg
Accents of English is about the way English is pronounced by different people in diffeent places. Volume I provides a synthesizing introduction, which shows how accents vary not only geographically, but also with social class, formality, sex and age; and in volumes 2 and 3 the author examines in greater depth the various accents used by people who speak English as their mother tongue: the accents of the regions of England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland (volume 2), and of the USA, Canada, and West Indies, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India, Black Africa and the Far East (volume 3). Each volume can be read independently, and together they form a major scholarly survey of considerable originality, which not only includes descriptions of hitherto neglected accents, but also examines the implications for phonological theory.
Volume I: An Introduction: Preface
Typographical conventions and phonetic symbols
Part I. Aspects of Accent: 1. Linguistic and social variability
2. Accent phonology
3. How accents differ
4. Why accents differ
Part II. Sets and Systems: 5. The reference accents
6. Standard lexical sets
7. Systems: a typology
Part III. Developments and Processes: 8. Residualisms
9. British prestige innovations
10. Some American innovations
11. Some further British innovations
Sources and further reading
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Linguistics [CF]
