Chapter
Open Access
Chapter 2. Is there an interlanguage speech acceptability deficit?
-
Rias van den Doel
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
- Chapter 1. The volatile linguistic shape of ‘Town Frisian’/‘Town Hollandic’ 11
- Chapter 2. Is there an interlanguage speech acceptability deficit? 35
- Chapter 3. Revisiting the vowel mergers of East Anglia 53
- Chapter 4. Modeling regional variation in voice onset time of Jutlandic varieties of Danish 79
- Chapter 5. “Organically German”? 111
- Chapter 6. Exploring an approach for modelling lectal coherence 135
- Chapter 7. “I’m dead posh in school” 161
- Chapter 8. Benim 181
- Chapter 9. Identification of clusters of lexical areas using geographical factors 209
- Chapter 10. (Il)literacy and language change 227
- Chapter 11. Dialect contact in the vowel system of Mišótika Cappadocian 247
- Chapter 12. Leaders of language change 269
- Chapter 13. Ethnic variation in real time 291
- Index 315
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
- Chapter 1. The volatile linguistic shape of ‘Town Frisian’/‘Town Hollandic’ 11
- Chapter 2. Is there an interlanguage speech acceptability deficit? 35
- Chapter 3. Revisiting the vowel mergers of East Anglia 53
- Chapter 4. Modeling regional variation in voice onset time of Jutlandic varieties of Danish 79
- Chapter 5. “Organically German”? 111
- Chapter 6. Exploring an approach for modelling lectal coherence 135
- Chapter 7. “I’m dead posh in school” 161
- Chapter 8. Benim 181
- Chapter 9. Identification of clusters of lexical areas using geographical factors 209
- Chapter 10. (Il)literacy and language change 227
- Chapter 11. Dialect contact in the vowel system of Mišótika Cappadocian 247
- Chapter 12. Leaders of language change 269
- Chapter 13. Ethnic variation in real time 291
- Index 315