Chapter
Open Access
7 Dialect death? The present state of the dialects of the Scottish fishing communities
-
Robert McColl Millar
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Acknowledgments X
- List of Contributors XI
- Contributors XII
- 1 Introduction 1
- 2 Stylistic devices of Christians expressing contradiction against the Gentiles 19
- 3 A ‘third-wave’ historical sociolinguistic approach to late Middle English correspondence: Evidence from the Stonor Letters 46
- 4 Advice to prospectors (and others). Knowledge dissemination, power and persuasion in Late Modern English emigrants’ guides and correspondence 67
- 5 Language policy in the long nineteenth century: Catalonia and Schleswig 81
- 6 Authorship and gender in English historical sociolinguistic research: Samples from the Paston Letters 108
- 7 Dialect death? The present state of the dialects of the Scottish fishing communities 143
- 8 Orthographic regularization in Early Modern English printed books: Grapheme distribution and vowel length indication 165
- 9 Diaglossia, individual variation and the limits of standardization: Evidence from Dutch 194
- 10 ‘Like a pack-hors trying to copy after an antilope’: A case of eighteenth-century non-native English 219
- 11 A mensa et thoro. On the tense relationship between literacy and the spoken word in early modern times 237
- List of Figures 262
- List of Tables 263
- Index 264
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Acknowledgments X
- List of Contributors XI
- Contributors XII
- 1 Introduction 1
- 2 Stylistic devices of Christians expressing contradiction against the Gentiles 19
- 3 A ‘third-wave’ historical sociolinguistic approach to late Middle English correspondence: Evidence from the Stonor Letters 46
- 4 Advice to prospectors (and others). Knowledge dissemination, power and persuasion in Late Modern English emigrants’ guides and correspondence 67
- 5 Language policy in the long nineteenth century: Catalonia and Schleswig 81
- 6 Authorship and gender in English historical sociolinguistic research: Samples from the Paston Letters 108
- 7 Dialect death? The present state of the dialects of the Scottish fishing communities 143
- 8 Orthographic regularization in Early Modern English printed books: Grapheme distribution and vowel length indication 165
- 9 Diaglossia, individual variation and the limits of standardization: Evidence from Dutch 194
- 10 ‘Like a pack-hors trying to copy after an antilope’: A case of eighteenth-century non-native English 219
- 11 A mensa et thoro. On the tense relationship between literacy and the spoken word in early modern times 237
- List of Figures 262
- List of Tables 263
- Index 264