Scotticisms in Grammar and Vocabulary: 'Like Runes Upon a Standin' Stane'?John Donald, 2005 - 178 Scotticisms in Grammar and Vocabulary investigates the historical development of the (mainly sociolinguistic) phenomena which favoured a process of increasing anglicisation in Late Modern Scots, leading many speakers and writers to strenuous attempts to avoid pronunciations, syntactic forms and lexical items that were restricted either from the geographical of the social point of view. These attempts, however, were never quite successful, and the influence of Scots on the distinctiveness of present-day Scottish English is still very clearly discernible. main features of contemporary Scottish Standard English are discussed. These chapters are followed by an analysis of the concept of 'Scotticism' from the historical point of view. Special prominence is given to the eighteenth century; the role of the most important prescriptive grammarians is described, together with an assessment of the ambiguous sociolinguistic attitudes that Scotticisms provoked at the turn of the century, when new literary figures returned status to 'the vernacular'. Finally, the nineteenth century is taken into consideration. This, in turn, leads back to contemporary language, in order to discuss the ways in which items have changed their status, from 'proscribed Scotticisms' to 'covert' or 'overt Scotticisms', worthy of stylistic consideration, and still employed as highly valuable tools of expression. |
Spis treści
The Languages of PresentDay Scotland | 1 |
Scotticisms Today | 18 |
Convergence and Distinctiveness | 37 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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Aberdeen accent actually Adams adjectives Aitken anglicisation appears attitude Boswell Burns Celtic languages Chapter claimed collection context Corpus described Dictionary diminutive discussed Dossena Edinburgh edition eighteenth century emphasised England English Language entries expression Fergusson Gaelic Görlach Henderson 1832 Highland Hume Hume's identified idioms included instance interest Jacobite James John Johnson kirk letter lexical items lexicography linguistic literary London Lowland matter of fact McClure Meurman-Solin Middle Scots Miller Motherwell Northern nouns occur Older Scots Ossian overt Scotticisms phonological phrases poems poetry political prepositional present pronunciation proverbs published quoted by Currie Ramsay reference remarks Robert Burns Scotch Scots and English Scots and SSE Scots Language Scots vocabulary Scottish culture Scottish English Scottish Gaelic Scottish Language Scottish literature Scottish Standard English sociolinguistic speakers specifically Scottish speech spelling spoken Statutes of Iona syntax Trudgill usage varieties verbs vernacular writing