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The Lesser-Known Varieties of English: An Introduction (Studies in English Language)
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The Lesser-Known Varieties of English
This is the first ever volume to compile sociolinguistic and historical infor-
mation on lesser-known, and relatively ignored, native varieties of English
around the world. Exploring areas as diverse as the Pacific, South Amer-
ica, the South Atlantic and East and Southern Africa, it shows how these
varieties are as much part of the big picture as major varieties and that their
analysis is essential for addressing some truly important issues in linguistic
theory, such as dialect obsolescence and death, language birth, dialect typol-
ogy and genetic classification, patterns of diffusion and transplantation and
contact-induced language change. It also shows how close interwoven fields
such as social history, contact linguistics and variationist sociolinguistics are
in accounting for their formation and maintenance, providing a thorough
description of the lesser-known varieties of English and their relevance for
language spread and change.
is Associated Professor of English Linguistics at
the University of Zurich. He has taught and lectured in New Zealand,
Germany and the USA. His previous publications include Isolation and
Language Change (
)and
St Helenian English ().
is Adjunct Professor of Sociolinguistics at theUniversity
of Agder. He has carried out research on dialects of English, Norwegian,
Greek, Albanian and Spanish and has written and edited more than thirty
books on sociolinguistics and dialectology including Sociolinguistic Variation
and Change (), A Glossary of Sociolinguistics ()and New-dialect
Formation ().
. is Professor and Chair of English Linguistics at the
University of Regensburg. He is the editor of the scholarly journal English
World-Wide and its associated book series, Varieties of English Around the
World . His previous publications include Introduction to Quantitative Anal-
ysis of Linguistic Survey Data ()and Postcolonial English (Cambridge,
).
. is Professor of Anthropology and Chair of Soci-
ology, Anthropology and Social Work at Texas Tech University. He pre-
viously taught at the University of Sydney and has conducted fieldwork in
Papua New Guinea, the American Southwest and most recently with Mon-
tagnard refugees in North Carolina, USA. He was the co-editor of Contact
Englishes of the Eastern Caribbean ( ).
), Consonant Change in English Worldwide (
General editor : Merja Kyto (Uppsala University)
Editorial Board : Bas Aarts (University College London), John Algeo
(University of Georgia), Susan Fitzmaurice (Northern Arizona
University), Charles F. Meyer (University of Massachusetts)
STUDIES IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE
The aim of this series is to provide a framework for original studies of English,
both present-day and past. All books are based securely on empirical research,
and represent theoretical and descriptive contributions to our knowledge of
national and international varieties of English, both written and spoken. The
series covers a broad range of topics and approaches, including syntax,
phonology, grammar, vocabulary, discourse, pragmatics and sociolinguistics,
and is aimed at an international readership.
Already published in this series
Christian Mair Infinitival complement clauses in English: a study of syntax in
discourse
Charles F. Meyer Apposition in contemporary English
Jan Firbas Functional sentence perspective in written and spoken communication
Izchak M. Schlesinger Cognitive space and linguistic case
Katie Wales Personal pronouns in present-day English
Laura Wright The development of Standard English,
: theories,
descriptions, conflicts
Charles F. Meyer English Corpus Linguistics: theory and practice
Stephen J. Nagle and Sara L. Sanders (eds.) English in the Southern United
States
Anne Curzan Gender shifts in the history of English
Kingsley Bolton Chinese Englishes
Irma Taavitsainen and Paivi Pahta (eds.) Medical and scientific writing in Late
Medieval English
Elizabeth Gordon, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea
Sudbury and Peter Trudgill New Zealand English: its origins and
evolution
Raymond Hickey (ed.) Legacies of colonial English
Merja Kyto, Mats Ryden and Erik Smitterberg (eds.) Nineteenth century
English: stability and change
John Algeo British or American English? A handbook of word and grammar
patterns
Christian Mair Twentieth-century English: history, variation and
standardization
Evelien Keizer The English noun phrase: the nature of linguistic categorization
Raymond Hickey Irish English: history and present-day forms
Gunter Rohdenburg and Julia Schl uter (eds.) One language, two grammars?
Differences between British and American English
Laurel J. Brinton The comment clause in English
Lieselotte Anderwald The morphology of English dialects: verb formation in
non-standard English
Jonathan Culpeper and Merja Kyto Early Modern English dialogues: spoken
interaction as writing
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