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Phonetic distance and intelligibility in Dutch
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Dirk Speelman
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Acknowledgments vii
- Table of contents ix
- List of contributors xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part I: Theoretical perspectives
- Enregistering pluricentric German 19
- Communicative and cognitive dimensions of pluricentric practices in French 49
- Linguistic pluricentrism as a neurological problem 83
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Part II: Corpus-based studies
- Lexical variation in aggregate perspective 103
- Stable Lexical Marker Analysis: A corpus-based identification of lexical variation 127
- The pluricentricity of Portuguese: A sociolectometrical approach to divergence between European and Brazilian Portuguese 143
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Part III: Experimental and attitudinal studies
- Global diffusion, regional attraction, local roots? Sociocognitive perspectives on the pluricentricity of English 191
- Phonetic distance and intelligibility in Dutch 227
- National variation of address in pluricentric languages: The examples of Swedish and German 243
- Subject index 271
- Author index 275
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Acknowledgments vii
- Table of contents ix
- List of contributors xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part I: Theoretical perspectives
- Enregistering pluricentric German 19
- Communicative and cognitive dimensions of pluricentric practices in French 49
- Linguistic pluricentrism as a neurological problem 83
-
Part II: Corpus-based studies
- Lexical variation in aggregate perspective 103
- Stable Lexical Marker Analysis: A corpus-based identification of lexical variation 127
- The pluricentricity of Portuguese: A sociolectometrical approach to divergence between European and Brazilian Portuguese 143
-
Part III: Experimental and attitudinal studies
- Global diffusion, regional attraction, local roots? Sociocognitive perspectives on the pluricentricity of English 191
- Phonetic distance and intelligibility in Dutch 227
- National variation of address in pluricentric languages: The examples of Swedish and German 243
- Subject index 271
- Author index 275