Sociolinguistic theory: linguistic variation and its social significance
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Malden, MA [u.a.]
Wiley-Blackwell
2009
|
Ausgabe: | rev. ed. |
Schriftenreihe: | Language in society
22 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXIV, 308 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9781405152464 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Sociolinguistic theory |b linguistic variation and its social significance |c J. K. Chambers |
250 | |a rev. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Malden, MA [u.a.] |b Wiley-Blackwell |c 2009 | |
300 | |a XXIV, 308 S. |b graph. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 1 | |a Language in society |v 22 | |
650 | 4 | |a Jezikoslovje | |
650 | 4 | |a Linguistics | |
650 | 4 | |a Sociolingvistika | |
650 | 4 | |a Teorije | |
650 | 4 | |a Theories | |
650 | 4 | |a Linguistik | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804138346421682176 |
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adam_text | Contents
List of Figures
xiii
List of Tables
xv
Series Editor s Preface
xvii
Preface to the First Edition
xviii
Preface to the Second Edition
xxi
Preface to the Revised Edition
xxii
Acknowledgments
xxiii
1
Correlations
1
1.1
The Domain of Sociolinguistics
2
1.1.1
Personal characteristics
2
1.1.2
Linguistic styles
4
1.1.3
Social characteristics
6
1.1.4
S
ocio
cultural factors
8
1.1.5
Sociological factors
9
1.1.6
Sociolinguistics and the sociology of language
10
1.2
The Variable as a Structural Unit
11
1.2.1
Coexistent systems and free variation
12
1.2.2
The sociolinguistic enterprise
14
1.2.2.1
Precursors
14
1.2.2.2
Labov s New York survey
16
1.2.2.3
Linguistic variables
17
1.
2.2
A Independent variables
17
1.2.2.5
Speech in the community
18
1.2.2.6
One subject, Susan
Salto
19
1.2.2.7
All subjects in three social classes
21
1.2.3
Figures and tables
22
1.3
Variation and the Tradition of Categoricity
25
1.3.1
Langue
and parole
25
1.3.2
The axiom of categoricity
26
1.3.3
Communicative competence
28
1.3.4
Linguistics without categoricity
32
1.3.5
Categorical theory and variation theory
34
1.3.6
Categoricity in other disciplines
35
Class, Network, and Mobility
38
2.1
Social Class and Sociolinguistic Sampling
40
2.1.1
Blue collar and white collar
41
2.1.2
Judgment samples
42
2.1.3
Random samples
43
2.2
Indexing Social Class
45
2.2.1
Socioeconomic indices
46
2.2.2
Subject indices
48
2.2.3
The primacy of occupation as a determinant of class
50
2.3
Class Markers
53
2.3.1
Spreading the news in
Westerntown
53
2.3.2
Boston short o
55
2.3.3
Norwich (a:)
55
2.3.4
Grammatical variables
56
2.3.5
Montreal qae-deletion
57
2.4
The Effects of Mobility
58
2.4.1
Caste and class
58
2.4.2
Comparative mobility
58
2.4.3
Mobility in language variation
59
2.4.4
Decline of Briticisms in Canadian English
60
2.4.5
New York (th) and (dh)
62
2.4.6
Mobility as a leveling force
64
2.5
Homogenization
65
2.5.1 /
a/-deletion in Sheshatshiu
66
2.5.2
/oul
in Milton Keynes
67
2.5.3
The persistence of homogenization
70
2.5.4
(aw)-fronting in Canada
71
2.5.5
Dialect laws of mobility and isolation
73
2.6
Networks
74
2.6.1
Norm enforcement
74
2.6.2
Network and class
75
2.6.3
Some network studies
76
2.6.4
Measures of network bonds
79
2.6.5
Sociometrics
81
2.6.6
Measures of network integration
83
2.7
Linguistic Correlates of Network Integration
85
2.7.1
Phonological markers in Martha s Vineyard
86
2.7.2
Grammatical markers in the Reading playgrounds
87
2.8
Interaction
of
Network
and Other Independent Variables
2.8.1
Social
class
89
2.8.2 Sex
89
2.8.3
Age
90
2.8.3.1 Network
change in
Detroit
90
2.9
Oddballs and
Insiders
92
2.9.1 Outsiders
96
2.9.1.1 Lames in
Harlem
96
2.9.1.2 Ignaz in Grossdorf
99
2.9.2
Aspir
ers
100
ΙΆ.Ιλ
А, В,
and
С
in
Articlave
100
2.9.2.2
Samson
in Anniston
104
2.9.3
Interlopers
106
2.9.3.1
Mr
J
in Toronto
106
2.9.3.2
Newcomers in King of Prussia
108
2.9.4
Insiders
109
2.9.4.1
A typical boy in a New England
village
109
2.9.4.2
Elizabeth in Toronto
110
2.9.4.3
Insiders as language leaders
112
2.9.5
The linguistic limits of individuation
113
Expressing Sex and Gender
115
3.1
The Interplay of Biology and Sociology
116
3.1.1
Sex and gender
116
3.1.2
Some sex differences
118
3.1.3
Probabilistic, not absolute, differences
119
3.1.4
Vocal pitch as a sex difference
119
3.2
Sex Patterns with Stable Variables
120
3.2.1
Variable (ng)
120
3.2.1.1
The regional variant [in]
121
3.2.1.2
Variant
[эп]
as a sex marker
122
3.2.2
Norwich (ng)
122
3.2.3
Sydney (ng)
123
3.3
Language, Gender, and Mobility in Two Communities
125
3.3.1
Inner-city Detroit
125
3.3.1.1
Variable (th)
126
3.3.1.2
Variable (r)
126
3.3.1.3
Multiple negation
128
3.3.1.4
Copula deletion
129
3.3.1.5
Gender roles in inner-city Detroit
130
3.3.2
Ballymacarrett,
Belfast
132
3.3.2.1 Variable
(л)
134
3.3.2.2 Variable
(th)
134
3.3.2.3 Variable
(ε)
135
3.3.2.4 Variable
(α)
135
3.3.2.5
Gender roles in Ballymacarrett
135
3.4
Sex and Gender Differences in Language
136
3.4.1
Gender-based variability
136
3.4.1.1
Isolation and gender roles
138
3.4.1.2
Shifting roles in coastal South Carolina
139
3.4.1.3
Mobility and gender roles
140
3.4.2
Sex-based variability
141
3.4.2.1 MC
blurring of gender roles
141
3.4.2.2
Status consciousness
142
3.4.2.3
Face
144
3.4.2.4
Sociolinguistic ability
145
3.4.2.5
Verbal ability
146
3.4.2.6
Psychological explanations
147
3.4.2.7
Sex differences
148
3.4.2.8
Insignificance of individual differences
149
3.5
Male and Female Speech Patterns in Other Societies
151
3.5.1
Limits on female—male differences
151
3.5.2
Putative differences in Japan
152
3.5.3
The Middle East
154
3.5.3.1
(q) in Cairo, Amman, and elsewhere
155
3.5.3.2
A gender-based explanation
156
3.5.3.3
Prestige and standard varieties
157
3.6
Linguistic Evidence for Sex and Gender Differences
158
Accents in Time
159
4.1
Aging
160
4.1.1
Physical and cultural indicators
160
4.1.2
Some linguistic indicators
162
4.2
The Acquisition of Sociolects
165
4.2.1
Three formative periods
166
4.2.2
Development of stylistic and social variants
166
4.2.2.1
Style-shifting by Edinburgh schoolboys
167
4.2.2.2
Communal patterns in Scottish
10-year-olds
168
4.2.2.3
Emerging African American phonology
in Washington
169
4.3
Family
and Friends
170
4.3.1
Dialect acquisition
172
4.3.1.1
Six Canadians in England
172
4.3.1.2
British twins in Australia
174
4.3.2
Generational differences in bilingual situations
175
4.3.2.1
Language shift in
Oberwart,
Austria
175
4.3.2.2
Loan words in Spanish Harlem
177
4.3.3
Parents versus peers
180
4.4
Declarations of Adolescence
181
4.4.1
An adolescent majority
181
4.4.2
Outer markings including slang
182
4.4.3
Adolescent networks and linguistic variation
184
4.4.3.1
Jocks and Burnouts in Detroit
185
4.4.3.2
Burnouts and Rednecks in Farmer City
187
4.5
Young Adults in the Talk Market
189
4.5.1
ГАе
marché
linguistique
190
4.5.2
Legitimized language in Montreal
191
4.5.2.1
Auxiliary avoir and
être
192
4.5.3
Playing the talk market
19
A
4.5.4
Linguistic stability in middle and old age
197
4.6
Changes in Progress
198
4.6.1
Age-grading
200
4.6.1.1
Zee and zed in southern Ontario
201
4.6.1.2
Glottal stops in Glasgow
203
4.6.2
Real time and apparent time
206
4.6.2.1
Real-time changes in Tsuruoka
207
4.6.2.2
An apparent-time change in Milwaukee
211
4.6.3
Testing the apparent-time hypothesis
213
4.6.3.1
Slower progress at higher frequencies:
(e) in Norwich
213
4.6.3.2
Verifying inferences about change:
(CH) in Panama
217
Adaptive Significance of Language Variation
220
5.1
The Babelian Hypothesis
221
5.1.1
The evidence of subjective reaction tests
222
5.1.1.1
Teachers evaluations of students
223
5.1.1.2
Employers evaluations of job candidates
223
5.1.2
Dialect as a source of conflict
224
5.2
Global Counteradaptivity and Local Adaptivity
225
5.2.1
Counteradaptivity and power
226
5.2.2
Adaptivity and community
227
5.3
Dialects in Lower Animals
229
5.5.7
Buzzy and Clear white-crowned sparrows
229
5.3.2
The theory of genetic adaptation
231
5.3.3
The theory of social adaptation
233
5.4
The Persistence of the
Non-Standard
234
5.4.1
Covert prestige
235
5.4.2
Status and solidarity
238
5.4.2.1
Jewish and
MC
accents in Montreal
238
5.4.2.2
High and low accents in Guangzhou
239
5.5
Traditional Theories of the Sources of Diversity
240
5.5.7
Variation and climates
241
5.5.2
Variation and contact
243
5.5.3
The prevalence of diversity
244
5.6
A Sociolinguistic Theory of the Sources of Diversity
245
5.6.7
Linguistic diversity and social strata
246
5.6.2
Two tenets about standard dialects
247
5.6.2.1
Naturalness and economy
248
5.6.2.2
Medial /t/
249
5.6.2.3
Economy as a general linguistic force
250
5.6.2.4
Morpheme-final consonant clusters
251
5.6.2.5
Standard and non-standard (CC)
251
5.6.3
Naturalness beyond phonetics
252
5.6.3.1
The principle of conjugation regularization
253
5.6.3.2
Standard and non-standard conjugation
regularization
255
5.6.4
Two constraints on variation in standard dialects
257
5.7
Vernacular Roots
258
5.7.7 Diffusionist
and structural explanations
259
5.7.2
Problems with the
diffusionist
position
259
5.7.3
The internal—structural position
261
5.7.4
Primitive and learned features
263
5.7.4.1
Obstruent devoicing in second-language
learning
263
5.7.4.2
Devoicing and voicing medial /t/
264
5.7.5
Sociolinguistic implications
265
5.8
Linguistic Variation and Social Identity
266
Notes
270
References
274
Index
294
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of Figures
xiii
List of Tables
xv
Series Editor's Preface
xvii
Preface to the First Edition
xviii
Preface to the Second Edition
xxi
Preface to the Revised Edition
xxii
Acknowledgments
xxiii
1
Correlations
1
1.1
The Domain of Sociolinguistics
2
1.1.1
Personal characteristics
2
1.1.2
Linguistic styles
4
1.1.3
Social characteristics
6
1.1.4
S
ocio
cultural factors
8
1.1.5
Sociological factors
9
1.1.6
Sociolinguistics and the sociology of language
10
1.2
The Variable as a Structural Unit
11
1.2.1
Coexistent systems and free variation
12
1.2.2
The sociolinguistic enterprise
14
1.2.2.1
Precursors
14
1.2.2.2
Labov's New York survey
16
1.2.2.3
Linguistic variables
17
1.
2.2
A Independent variables
17
1.2.2.5
Speech in the community
18
1.2.2.6
One subject, Susan
Salto
19
1.2.2.7
All subjects in three social classes
21
1.2.3
Figures and tables
22
1.3
Variation and the Tradition of Categoricity
25
1.3.1
Langue
and parole
25
1.3.2
The axiom of categoricity
26
1.3.3
Communicative competence
28
1.3.4
Linguistics without categoricity
32
1.3.5
Categorical theory and variation theory
34
1.3.6
Categoricity in other disciplines
35
Class, Network, and Mobility
38
2.1
Social Class and Sociolinguistic Sampling
40
2.1.1
Blue collar and white collar
41
2.1.2
Judgment samples
42
2.1.3
Random samples
43
2.2
Indexing Social Class
45
2.2.1
Socioeconomic indices
46
2.2.2
Subject indices
48
2.2.3
The primacy of occupation as a determinant of class
50
2.3
Class Markers
53
2.3.1
Spreading the news in
Westerntown
53
2.3.2
Boston "short o"
55
2.3.3
Norwich (a:)
55
2.3.4
Grammatical variables
56
2.3.5
Montreal qae-deletion
57
2.4
The Effects of Mobility
58
2.4.1
Caste and class
58
2.4.2
Comparative mobility
58
2.4.3
Mobility in language variation
59
2.4.4
Decline of Briticisms in Canadian English
60
2.4.5
New York (th) and (dh)
62
2.4.6
Mobility as a leveling force
64
2.5
Homogenization
65
2.5.1 /
a/-deletion in Sheshatshiu
66
2.5.2
/oul
in Milton Keynes
67
2.5.3
The persistence of homogenization
70
2.5.4
(aw)-fronting in Canada
71
2.5.5
Dialect laws of mobility and isolation
73
2.6
Networks
74
2.6.1
Norm enforcement
74
2.6.2
Network and class
75
2.6.3
Some network studies
76
2.6.4
Measures of network bonds
79
2.6.5
Sociometrics
81
2.6.6
Measures of network integration
83
2.7
Linguistic Correlates of Network Integration
85
2.7.1
Phonological markers in Martha's Vineyard
86
2.7.2
Grammatical markers in the Reading playgrounds
87
2.8
Interaction
of
Network
and Other Independent Variables
2.8.1
Social
class
89
2.8.2 Sex
89
2.8.3
Age
90
2.8.3.1 Network
change in
Detroit
90
2.9
Oddballs and
Insiders
92
2.9.1 Outsiders
96
2.9.1.1 Lames in
Harlem
96
2.9.1.2 Ignaz in Grossdorf
99
2.9.2
Aspir
ers
100
ΙΆ.Ιλ
А, В,
and
С
in
Articlave
100
2.9.2.2
Samson
in Anniston
104
2.9.3
Interlopers
106
2.9.3.1
Mr
J
in Toronto
106
2.9.3.2
Newcomers in King of Prussia
108
2.9.4
Insiders
109
2.9.4.1
A "typical" boy in a New England
village
109
2.9.4.2
Elizabeth in Toronto
110
2.9.4.3
Insiders as language leaders
112
2.9.5
The linguistic limits of individuation
113
Expressing Sex and Gender
115
3.1
The Interplay of Biology and Sociology
116
3.1.1
Sex and gender
116
3.1.2
Some sex differences
118
3.1.3
Probabilistic, not absolute, differences
119
3.1.4
Vocal pitch as a sex difference
119
3.2
Sex Patterns with Stable Variables
120
3.2.1
Variable (ng)
120
3.2.1.1
The regional variant [in]
121
3.2.1.2
Variant
[эп]
as a sex marker
122
3.2.2
Norwich (ng)
122
3.2.3
Sydney (ng)
123
3.3
Language, Gender, and Mobility in Two Communities
125
3.3.1
Inner-city Detroit
125
3.3.1.1
Variable (th)
126
3.3.1.2
Variable (r)
126
3.3.1.3
Multiple negation
128
3.3.1.4
Copula deletion
129
3.3.1.5
Gender roles in inner-city Detroit
130
3.3.2
Ballymacarrett,
Belfast
132
3.3.2.1 Variable
(л)
134
3.3.2.2 Variable
(th)
134
3.3.2.3 Variable
(ε)
135
3.3.2.4 Variable
(α)
135
3.3.2.5
Gender roles in Ballymacarrett
135
3.4
Sex and Gender Differences in Language
136
3.4.1
Gender-based variability
136
3.4.1.1
Isolation and gender roles
138
3.4.1.2
Shifting roles in coastal South Carolina
139
3.4.1.3
Mobility and gender roles
140
3.4.2
Sex-based variability
141
3.4.2.1 MC
blurring of gender roles
141
3.4.2.2
"Status consciousness"
142
3.4.2.3
"Face"
144
3.4.2.4
Sociolinguistic ability
145
3.4.2.5
Verbal ability
146
3.4.2.6
Psychological explanations
147
3.4.2.7
Sex differences
148
3.4.2.8
Insignificance of individual differences
149
3.5
Male and Female Speech Patterns in Other Societies
151
3.5.1
Limits on female—male differences
151
3.5.2
Putative differences in Japan
152
3.5.3
The Middle East
154
3.5.3.1
(q) in Cairo, Amman, and elsewhere
155
3.5.3.2
A gender-based explanation
156
3.5.3.3
Prestige and standard varieties
157
3.6
Linguistic Evidence for Sex and Gender Differences
158
Accents in Time
159
4.1
Aging
160
4.1.1
Physical and cultural indicators
160
4.1.2
Some linguistic indicators
162
4.2
The Acquisition of Sociolects
165
4.2.1
Three formative periods
166
4.2.2
Development of stylistic and social variants
166
4.2.2.1
Style-shifting by Edinburgh schoolboys
167
4.2.2.2
Communal patterns in Scottish
10-year-olds
168
4.2.2.3
Emerging African American phonology
in Washington
169
4.3
Family
and Friends
170
4.3.1
Dialect acquisition
172
4.3.1.1
Six Canadians in England
172
4.3.1.2
British twins in Australia
174
4.3.2
Generational differences in bilingual situations
175
4.3.2.1
Language shift in
Oberwart,
Austria
175
4.3.2.2
Loan words in Spanish Harlem
177
4.3.3
Parents versus peers
180
4.4
Declarations of Adolescence
181
4.4.1
An adolescent majority
181
4.4.2
Outer markings including slang
182
4.4.3
Adolescent networks and linguistic variation
184
4.4.3.1
Jocks and Burnouts in Detroit
185
4.4.3.2
Burnouts and Rednecks in Farmer City
187
4.5
Young Adults in the Talk Market
189
4.5.1
ГАе
marché
linguistique
190
4.5.2
"Legitimized language" in Montreal
191
4.5.2.1
Auxiliary avoir and
être
192
4.5.3
Playing the talk market
19
A
4.5.4
Linguistic stability in middle and old age
197
4.6
Changes in Progress
198
4.6.1
Age-grading
200
4.6.1.1
Zee and zed in southern Ontario
201
4.6.1.2
Glottal stops in Glasgow
203
4.6.2
Real time and apparent time
206
4.6.2.1
Real-time changes in Tsuruoka
207
4.6.2.2
An apparent-time change in Milwaukee
211
4.6.3
Testing the apparent-time hypothesis
213
4.6.3.1
Slower progress at higher frequencies:
(e) in Norwich
213
4.6.3.2
Verifying inferences about change:
(CH) in Panama
217
Adaptive Significance of Language Variation
220
5.1
The Babelian Hypothesis
221
5.1.1
The evidence of subjective reaction tests
222
5.1.1.1
Teachers' evaluations of students
223
5.1.1.2
Employers'evaluations of job candidates
223
5.1.2
Dialect as a source of conflict
224
5.2
Global Counteradaptivity and Local Adaptivity
225
5.2.1
Counteradaptivity and power
226
5.2.2
Adaptivity and community
227
5.3
Dialects in Lower Animals
229
5.5.7
Buzzy and Clear white-crowned sparrows
229
5.3.2
The theory of genetic adaptation
231
5.3.3
The theory of social adaptation
233
5.4
The Persistence of the
Non-Standard
234
5.4.1
Covert prestige
235
5.4.2
Status and solidarity
238
5.4.2.1
Jewish and
MC
accents in Montreal
238
5.4.2.2
High and low accents in Guangzhou
239
5.5
Traditional Theories of the Sources of Diversity
240
5.5.7
Variation and climates
241
5.5.2
Variation and contact
243
5.5.3
The prevalence of diversity
244
5.6
A Sociolinguistic Theory of the Sources of Diversity
245
5.6.7
Linguistic diversity and social strata
246
5.6.2
Two tenets about standard dialects
247
5.6.2.1
Naturalness and economy
248
5.6.2.2
Medial /t/
249
5.6.2.3
Economy as a general linguistic force
250
5.6.2.4
Morpheme-final consonant clusters
251
5.6.2.5
Standard and non-standard (CC)
251
5.6.3
Naturalness beyond phonetics
252
5.6.3.1
The principle of conjugation regularization
253
5.6.3.2
Standard and non-standard conjugation
regularization
255
5.6.4
Two constraints on variation in standard dialects
257
5.7
Vernacular Roots
258
5.7.7 Diffusionist
and structural explanations
259
5.7.2
Problems with the
diffusionist
position
259
5.7.3
The internal—structural position
261
5.7.4
Primitive and learned features
263
5.7.4.1
Obstruent devoicing in second-language
learning
263
5.7.4.2
Devoicing and voicing medial /t/
264
5.7.5
Sociolinguistic implications
265
5.8
Linguistic Variation and Social Identity
266
Notes
270
References
274
Index
294 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Chambers, Jack K. 1938- |
author_GND | (DE-588)123500346 |
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dewey-search | 306.44 |
dewey-sort | 3306.44 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Sprachwissenschaft Soziologie Literaturwissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Sprachwissenschaft Soziologie Literaturwissenschaft |
edition | rev. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV035175953 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T22:56:07Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:26:44Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781405152464 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016982800 |
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physical | XXIV, 308 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2009 |
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publisher | Wiley-Blackwell |
record_format | marc |
series | Language in society |
series2 | Language in society |
spelling | Chambers, Jack K. 1938- Verfasser (DE-588)123500346 aut Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance J. K. Chambers rev. ed. Malden, MA [u.a.] Wiley-Blackwell 2009 XXIV, 308 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Language in society 22 Jezikoslovje Linguistics Sociolingvistika Teorije Theories Linguistik Sociolinguistics Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd rswk-swf Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 s Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 s 1\p DE-604 Language in society 22 (DE-604)BV000010344 22 Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016982800&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Chambers, Jack K. 1938- Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance Language in society Jezikoslovje Linguistics Sociolingvistika Teorije Theories Linguistik Sociolinguistics Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4077623-2 (DE-588)4059787-8 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance |
title_auth | Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance |
title_exact_search | Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance |
title_exact_search_txtP | Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance |
title_full | Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance J. K. Chambers |
title_fullStr | Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance J. K. Chambers |
title_full_unstemmed | Sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance J. K. Chambers |
title_short | Sociolinguistic theory |
title_sort | sociolinguistic theory linguistic variation and its social significance |
title_sub | linguistic variation and its social significance |
topic | Jezikoslovje Linguistics Sociolingvistika Teorije Theories Linguistik Sociolinguistics Soziolinguistik (DE-588)4077623-2 gnd Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Jezikoslovje Linguistics Sociolingvistika Teorije Theories Linguistik Sociolinguistics Soziolinguistik Theorie Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016982800&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV000010344 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT chambersjackk sociolinguistictheorylinguisticvariationanditssocialsignificance |