Spoken English in Ireland, 1600-1740: Twenty-seven Representative Texts |
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Page 179
[ Quinn ( 1941-2 ) 164-5 ] : " in England wee find the Irish seruant very faithfull and Louing . " This testimony is the more surprising in the light of the belief then current that a favourite occupation of Irishmen was the cutting of ...
[ Quinn ( 1941-2 ) 164-5 ] : " in England wee find the Irish seruant very faithfull and Louing . " This testimony is the more surprising in the light of the belief then current that a favourite occupation of Irishmen was the cutting of ...
Page 183
Certainly those Englishmen who took Irish servants back with them to England would probably have taken them into their service in the Pale , and English visitors who observed the Irish on their native ground would have had most ...
Certainly those Englishmen who took Irish servants back with them to England would probably have taken them into their service in the Pale , and English visitors who observed the Irish on their native ground would have had most ...
Page 313
that in fact the actors made no special study of dialect , but relied on the dramatist to indicate to them what was required ; and when , from about 1730 onwards , we find Irish actors regularly playing Irish parts on the London stage ...
that in fact the actors made no special study of dialect , but relied on the dramatist to indicate to them what was required ; and when , from about 1730 onwards , we find Irish actors regularly playing Irish parts on the London stage ...
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Contents
THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND | 11 |
DESCRIPTION OF THE TEXTS TEXTS I Captain Thomas Stukeley 15961605 | 31 |
Sir John Oldcastle 15991600 | 33 |
Copyright | |
33 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
appears bilingual called Captain century common consonant construction dear dialect doubt Dublin early effect England English Enter evidence expected fact final Fingallian front Gaelic give hand Hiberno-English Hudibras indicate influence instances Ireland Irish Irishman John kind King known language later Letter look Lord Manx meaning Middle never non-standard normal occurs origin palatal Patrick perhaps period phrase play possible present printed probably pronunciation reason recorded reference reflect remained replaced represent rhyme scene seems seventeenth shelf short similar sounds speak speakers speech spelling Standard Standard English stress suggest sweet taken Teague tell texts Thomas thou usage verb viii vowel words writing written xvii xviii xxiv xxvii