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A Corpus-Based Sociolinguistic Study of Indefinite Article Forms in London English
93
Citations
24
References
2010
Year
London EnglishLinguistic AnthropologyMulticultural London EnglishGlobal EnglishLanguage VariationSpoken FrenchPhonologyCorpus LinguisticsSyntaxPhoneticsHistorical LinguisticsGrammarDiscourse AnalysisLanguage StudiesSociolinguisticsArtsColloquial LanguageEnglish WritingBilingual PhonologySpoken London EnglishCorpus-based Sociolinguistic StudyIndefinite Article FormsPhonology MorphologyLanguage CorpusRomance LanguagesIndefinite ArticleLinguistics
This article reports on work carried out as part of the project Analysis of Spoken London English Using Corpus Tools, namely, an analysis of the use of indefinite article forms in spoken London English in a corpus of transcribed interviews, combining methodologies from sociolinguistics and corpus linguistics.The authors find a relatively high frequency of a before words beginning with a vowel, where Standard English will have an. Social factors, in particular speakers’ age, ethnicity, and place of residence, are more important than linguistic factors affecting the use of a before vowels. The authors argue that the indefinite article a before vowels forms part of Multicultural London English, along with other phonological and grammatical features that have previously been documented. The indefinite article a before vowels seems to have undergone a process of reallocation in which its status has been realigned, possibly because of an increase in social acceptance of nonstandard forms.
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