Spoken English in Ireland, 1600-1740: Twenty-seven Representative Texts |
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Page 72
The Dialogue follows the same pattern as Polite Conversation , though the speakers are not named but are denoted merely by the initials A. and B .; in Irish Eloquence the material is improved , expanded , and arranged in the form of a ...
The Dialogue follows the same pattern as Polite Conversation , though the speakers are not named but are denoted merely by the initials A. and B .; in Irish Eloquence the material is improved , expanded , and arranged in the form of a ...
Page 187
effect of interference is that the bilingual speaker uses forms of speech which are imperfect attempts at the forms of ... the same imper- fection is often enough repeated , either by the same speaker or by a number of speakers , it may ...
effect of interference is that the bilingual speaker uses forms of speech which are imperfect attempts at the forms of ... the same imper- fection is often enough repeated , either by the same speaker or by a number of speakers , it may ...
Page 317
... it seems most probable that the standard was used in its purity by a small number of careful speakers , and that other educated speakers used a form of pronunciation which , while neither dialectal nor vulgar , still differed in ...
... it seems most probable that the standard was used in its purity by a small number of careful speakers , and that other educated speakers used a form of pronunciation which , while neither dialectal nor vulgar , still differed in ...
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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 | |
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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