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  1. Variation in an English dialect : a sociolinguistic study

    Cheshire, Jenny, 1946-
    Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1982.

  2. Dialect and education : some European perspectives

    Clevedon [England] ; Philadelphia : Multilingual Matters, c1989.

    All countries face educational problems that result from the co-existence of a national standard variety of language and a range of indigenous dialects. In addition to publishing the latest research on these theses this book also contains a representative range of classroom initiatives designed to cope with potential educational problems arising from the relationship between dialect and standard language.

  3. English around the world : sociolinguistic perspectives

    Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, c1991.

    Only a few centuries ago the English language consisted of a collection of dialects spoken mainly by monolinguals and only within the shores of a small island. Now the English language includes such typologically distinct varieties as pidgins and creoles, 'new' Englishes, and a range of different standard and nonstandard varieties that are spoken on a regular basis in many different countries throughout the world. English is also, of course, the main language used for communication at an international level. The use of English in such a diverse range of social contexts around the world provides us with a unique opportunity to analyse and document the linguistic variation and change that is occurring within a single language, on a far greater scale - as far as we know - than has ever happened in the world's linguistic history before. This volume is intended to give a comprehensive account of our current knowledge of variation in the use of the English language around the world. Overview papers, written by specialist authors, survey the social context in which English is spoken in those parts of the world where it is widely used. Case study papers then provide representative examples of the empirical research that has been carried out into the English that is spoken in that part of the world. The volume therefore contributes both to our understanding of the English language worldwide and to a more general understanding of language as it is used in its social context. It assesses the extent of our current knowledge of variation in the English language and points to gaps in our understanding which future research might set out to remedy.

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