9.1624, Books: Historical Sociolinguistics

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-9-1624. Tue Nov 17 1998. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 9.1624, Books: Historical Sociolinguistics

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1)
Date:  Sat, 14 Nov 1998 13:30:03 +0100 (MET)
From:  Christoph Eyrich <eyrich at zedat.fu-berlin.de>
Subject:  Language Change: Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics

2)
Date:  Mon, 16 Nov 1998 15:00:35 +0100 (MET)
From:  Christoph Eyrich <eyrich at zedat.fu-berlin.de>
Subject:  Advances in English Historical Linguistics, Fisiak & Krygier (Editors)

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Sat, 14 Nov 1998 13:30:03 +0100 (MET)
From:  Christoph Eyrich <eyrich at zedat.fu-berlin.de>
Subject:  Language Change: Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics



		       Ernst Hakon Jahr (Editor)

			   Language Change
	       Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics

                  1998. 23 x 15,5 cm. VIII, 308 pages
		  Cloth DM 198,-/approx. US$ 124.00
			  ISBN 3-11-015634-2
	  Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs 114

During the past three decades, with sociolinguistics emerging as a
major field of linguistic research, historical sociolinguistics has
been established as an important subfield of historical linguistics.

The papers in the present volume - most of which were first presented
at the Twelfth International Tromso Symposium on Language: Historical
Sociolinguistics, held at the University of Tromso on June 9--11, 1994
- contribute to a much needed theoretical discussion of this subfield
as well as bringing together a considerable body of empirical data
pertaining to the description and analysis of historical
sociolinguistic conditions.

                              Contents

Preface * HISTORICAL SOCIOLINGUISTICS - THEORIES AND METHODS * Els
Oksaar, Social networks, communicative acts and the multilingual
individual.  Methodological issues in the field of language change *
James Milroy, Toward a speaker-based account of language change *
Wieslaw Awedyk, Traditional historical linguistics and historical
sociolinguistics * Agnieszka Kielkiewicz-Janowiak, Child-to-parent
address change in Polish * HISTORICAL SOCIOLINGUISTICS -- DEAD
LANGUAGES * Werner Winter, Sociolinguistics and dead languages * Folke
Josephson, Decay of suffixation in a corpus language * Historical
code-switching and bilingualism * Laura Wright, Mixed-language
business writing: five hundred years of code-switching * Ernst Hakon
Jahr, Sociolinguistics in historical language contact: the
Scandinavian languages and Low German during the Hanseatic period *
Anna-Riitta Lindgren, Linguistic variation and the historical
sociology of multilingualism in Kven communities * HISTORICAL
SOCIOLINGUISTICS - VARIETIES OF ENGLISH * Laura Wright, Middle English
variation: the London English Guild Certificates of 1388/89 * Peter
Trudgill, The chaos before the order: New Zealand English and the
second stage of new-dialect formation * Raymond Hickey, Developments
and change in Dublin English * Wolfgang Viereck, African American
English: Verbal -s and be-2 in Hyatt's earlier and later corpus *
HISTORICAL SOCIOLINGUISTICS - NORWEGIAN * Endre Morck, Sociolinguistic
studies on the basis of medieval Norwegian charters * Arnold Dalen,
Contributing factors in the making of the post-medieval urban dialect
of Trondheim * Subject index
_______________________________________________________________________

Mouton de Gruyter                         Walter de Gruyter, Inc.
Postfach 30 34 21                         200 Saw Mill River Road
D-10728 Berlin                            Hawthorne, NY 10532
Germany                                   USA
Fax:   +49 (0)30 26005-351                Fax: +1 914 747-1326
email: mouton at degruyter.de

Publications by de Gruyter can also be ordered via World Wide Web:
                      http://www.deGruyter.com







-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Mon, 16 Nov 1998 15:00:35 +0100 (MET)
From:  Christoph Eyrich <eyrich at zedat.fu-berlin.de>
Subject:  Advances in English Historical Linguistics, Fisiak & Krygier (Editors)


	      Jacek Fisiak and Marcin Krygier (Editors)

	      Advances in English Historical Linguistics

                  1998. 23 x 15,5 cm. IX, 489 pages
		  Cloth DM 278,-/approx. US$ 310.00
			  ISBN 3-11-016151-6
	  Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs 112

               Mouton de Gruyter * Berlin * New York

This volume contains a broad selection of papers presented at the
Ninth International Conference on English Historical Linguistics, held
at Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, in August 1996. The selection
of articles reflects the main areas of current scholarly interest in
English historical linguistics.

                            Contents

Gunnar Bergh, Double prepositions in English * Don Chapman,
Motivations for producing and analyzing compounds in Wulfstan's
sermons * Guohua Chen, The degrammaticalization of
addressee-satisfaction conditionals in Early Modern English *
Christiane Dalton-Puffer, From unasecendlic to unspeakable: The role
of domain structure in morphological change * Roberta Facchinetti,
Anthony Huish: A 17th-century English grammarian * Maurizio Gotti,
John Bullokar's `Termes of Art' * Raymond Hickey, The Dublin Vowel
Shift and the historical perspective * Richard M. Hogg, On the
ideological boundaries of Old English dialects * Kristin Killie, The
spread of -ly to present participles * Willem F. Koopman, Inversion
after single and multiple topics in Old English * Marcin Krygier,
Epenthesis and Mouillierung in the explanation of i-umlaut: The rise
and fall of a theory * Maria Jose Lopez-Couso and Belen Mendez-Naya,
On minor declarative complementizers in the history of English: The
case of but * Bettelou Los, Bare and to-infinitives in Old English:
Callaway revisited * Angelika Lutz, The interplay of external and
internal factors in morphological restructuring: The case of you *
Donka Minkova and Robert P. Stockwell, The origins of long-short
allomorphy in English * Rafal Molencki, Modals in past counterfactual
conditional protases * Stephen J. Nagle and Sara L. Sanders,
Downsizing the preterite-presents in Middle English * Terttu
Nevalainen, Social mobility and the decline of multiple negation in
Early Modern English * Michiko Ogura, The grammaticalization in
Medieval English * Mieko Ogura and William S-Y. Wang, Evolution theory
and lexical diffusion * Masayuki Ohkado, On nominative case assignment
in Old English * Helena Raumolin-Brunberg, Social factors and
pronominal change in the seventeenth century: The Civil-War effect?  *
Matti Rissanen, Towards an integrated view of the development of
English: Notes on causal linking * Aimo Seppanen, Problems of
functional structure in some relative clauses * Robin D. Smith,
Eighteenth-century linguistics and authorship: The cases of Dyche,
Priestley, and Buchanan * Toril Swan, Adverbialization and
subject-modification in Old English * Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade,
Standardization of English spelling: The eighteenth-century printers'
contribution * Jerzy Welna, The functional relationship between rules
(Old English voicing of fricatives and lengthening of vowels before
homorganic clusters) * Index of subjects
_______________________________________________________________________
Mouton de Gruyter                         Walter de Gruyter, Inc.
Postfach 30 34 21                         200 Saw Mill River Road
D-10728 Berlin                            Hawthorne, NY 10532
Germany                                   USA
Fax:   +49 (0)30 26005-351                Fax: +1 914 747-1326
email: mouton at degruyter.de

Publications by de Gruyter can also be ordered via World Wide Web:
                      http://www.deGruyter.com


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