Spoken English in Ireland, 1600-1740: Twenty-seven Representative Texts |
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Page 187
... bilingualism will last long after the bilingual situation has ceased to exist , and successive generations of monoglot speakers will use a language which , though historically it owes something both to the original primary and to the ...
... bilingualism will last long after the bilingual situation has ceased to exist , and successive generations of monoglot speakers will use a language which , though historically it owes something both to the original primary and to the ...
Page 199
... speakers of various kinds of Irish . For the speaker of a variety of Irish which retained the five long vowels of ... bilingual speakers would also equate ME and è with CG é , and ME i with CG í . This need not necessarily be so ...
... speakers of various kinds of Irish . For the speaker of a variety of Irish which retained the five long vowels of ... bilingual speakers would also equate ME and è with CG é , and ME i with CG í . This need not necessarily be so ...
Page 284
... Bilingual speakers have the same kind of difficulty , and ( like children ) may use incorrect " regular " forms . Unlike children , however , bilingual speakers may be aware of the danger of making mistakes , and may show a preference ...
... Bilingual speakers have the same kind of difficulty , and ( like children ) may use incorrect " regular " forms . Unlike children , however , bilingual speakers may be aware of the danger of making mistakes , and may show a preference ...
Contents
THE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND II | 11 |
DESCRIPTION OF THE TEXTS | 31 |
TEXTS | 76 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Aphorismical Discovery aund back vowel bilingual speakers Bog-Witticisms Brogue Captain consonant dear Joy Dermot Derry dialect diphthong Dobson doubt Dublin Dundalk England evidence final Fingall Fingallian front vowels haue Hiberno Hiberno-English Honest Whore idiom instances Ireland Irish Hudibras Irish language Irish Masque Irish neutral Irish words King loanwords long vowel maake Manx Gaelic meaning Munster Irish Nees non-standard spellings noun oaths occurs origin palatal palatal consonant Patrick phonemes phrase play postponed stress printed probably pronoun pronunciation Purgatorium Hibernicum rapparees reference reflect represent rhyme scene Scottish Scottish Gaelic secondary language seems seventeenth century sh-spellings shelf Shoul Sir John Oldcastle speech Stage Irish Standard English Stukeley Teague tell texts Thomas Thomas Stukeley thou Ubique XII Ulster unvoicing usage verb viii Welsh Embassador write construction xvii xviii xxiii xxiv xxvi xxvii