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12. Real and perceived variation in Dublin English

  • John Lonergan
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Cityscapes and Perceptual Dialectology
This chapter is in the book Cityscapes and Perceptual Dialectology
© 2016 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

© 2016 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. List of illustrations viii
  4. List of tables xi
  5. Preface xiii
  6. Acknowledgements xvii
  7. Notes on contributors xviii
  8. 1. Introduction 1
  9. 2. Developing methods in Perceptual Dialectology 9
  10. Part I: Differences in the perception of rural and urban areas
  11. 3. Rural vs. urban: Perception and production of identity in a border city 27
  12. 4. City talk and Country talk: Perceptions of urban and rural English in Washington State 55
  13. 5. Rural “rednecks” and urban “bluebloods”: The (in)compatibility of sounding gay and sounding southern 73
  14. 6. Urbanicity and language variation and change: Mapping dialect perceptions in and of Seoul 97
  15. Part II: Processes of perception and language change
  16. 7. The strength of stereotypes in the production and perception of the Viennese dark lateral 119
  17. 8. Access and attitudes: A study of adolescents’ metalinguistic awareness 137
  18. 9. The accents of Marseille: Perceptions and linguistic change 159
  19. Part III: The relationship between perception and “reality”
  20. 10. Perceptual prominence of city-based dialect areas in Great Britain 185
  21. 11. Dialect perception and identification in Nottingham 209
  22. 12. Real and perceived variation in Dublin English 233
  23. 13. Perceptual Dialectology, speech samples, and the concept of salience: Initial findings from the DFG-project “Lay Linguists’ perspective on German regional varieties: Reconstructing lay linguistic conceptualizations of German in a perceptual dialectology approach” 257
  24. References 275
  25. Index 299
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