“Contents” in “Studies in Area Linguistics”
Contents
Chapter 1. From Sampling to Publication
1.12 Constructing the Questionnaire
1.14 Recording the Speech Sounds
1.3 Publication of the Findings
Chapter 2. From Heterogloss to Dialect Boundary
2.2 Lexical Heteroglosses: The Upper South, the Eastern States, the Midwest
2.3 Types of Phonological Heteroglosses
2.33 Lexical Incidence of Shared Phonemes
2.4 Morphological Heteroglosses
Chapter 3. The Sociocultural Background of Dialect Areas in American English
3.2 The Dialectal Structure of New England
3.3 The Boundary between the Northern and the Midland Dialect Areas
3.4 The Structure of the Upper South
Chapter 4. The Adoption of Foreign Words in American English
Chapter 5. The Historical Relation of American English to British English
5.21 The System of Syllabic Phonemes
5.23 Post-Settlement Importations
5.24 Regional Variants in the Phonic Realization of Shared Phonemes
Chapter 6. The Patterning of Dialect Areas
6.3 Dialect Areas of Medieval England
6.7 The Dialectal Structure of Italy
6.8 The Dialectal Structure of France
6.82 The Transition Belt between Francien and Provençal
6.9 The Dialectal Structure of the Iberian Peninsula
Chapter 7. Transplanted Languages
7.32 Simplification of the Consonant
7.33 Simplification of the Verb
7.42 Morphological Simplification
7.43 Simplification of the Phonemic System
8.2 Diffusion of Reflexes of Postvocalic / r / in the Upper South
8.3 The Spreading of Diphthongal_ Reflexe s of Middle High German / ῑ, ū, ǖ/
8.4 Northward Diffusion in the Rhineland
8.5 Northward Diffusion in Eastern Germany
8.6 Southward Diffusion of Central Bavarian Phonological Features
8.7 Southward Diffusion of North Italian Consonants
8.8 Diffusion between Unrelated Languages in India
Chapter 9. The Adaptation of Foreign Elements
9.1 Adaptation of French Words to Middle English
9.2 Phonological Adaptation in South Bavarian
9.3 The Adaptation of English Words to Norwegian Word Tones
9.4 Adaptation of Latin to Celtic Speech Habits in Northern Italy
9.5 Adaptation of Latin to Celtic Speech Habits in West Romanic
9.6 An Etruscan Phonological Reflex in Tuscany?
Chapter 10. Parallel Development or Diffusion?
10.2 The Germanic Language Family
10.3 The Indo-European Language Family
Chapter 11. The Social Dimension in Area Linguistics
11.2 The Investigation of Urban Speech
11.21 The Speech of New York City
11.22 Stratification in the Lower East Side of Manhattan
11.23 Social Gradation of Negro Speech in Washington, D. C.
11.24 The Negro Community in Memphis, Tenn.
11.25 Negro Speech in Chicago, 111.
11.26 The English of the Mexican Community in San Antonio, Tex.
11.27 The Relations between Urban and Rural Speech in Two Swiss Cities
11.28 Recent Phonological Innovations in Vienna
11.29 Phonological Variants in the Speech of Young Parisians
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