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8. Wordstress in West-Germanic and North-Germanic languages
Empirical Approaches To Language Typology, 1999Michael Jessen, Gösta Bruce
exaly +2 more sources
Heritage Germanic Languages in North America
2020Janne Bondi Johannessen +2 more
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Moribund Germanic Heritage Languages in North America
2015Tor A Åfarli +2 more
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Language Contact and New Dialect Formation: Evidence from German in North America
Language and Linguistics Compass, 2011Abstract When viewing language and dialect contact through the lens of the social settings of variation and acquisition, it becomes apparent that the types and degrees of conservatism in colonial dialects of German are tightly tied to the varieties learned and the patterns of acquisition in the community.
Daniel Nützel, Joseph Salmons
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A multilingual speech corpus of North-Germanic languages
2014The Nordic Dialect Corpus project was initiated by the Scandinavian Dialect Syntax Network (ScanDiaSyn). In order to be able to study the North Germanic (i.e., Nordic) dialects, proper documentation of the dialects was needed. A corpus consisting of natural speech by dialect speakers was developed in order to systematically map and study syntactic ...
Janne Bondi Johannessen +3 more
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The Origin of the Germanic Languages and the Indo-Europeanising of North Europe
Language, 1932As the title shows, the author of this article does not hold with the theory that the spread of the Indo-European languages had its origin in northern Europe. At present we have no means of defining with certainty the starting point, the original 'home' of the Indo-Europeans.
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The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2002
This project investigates the acoustic variability of vowels produced in multisyllabic nonsense words /cvC1VC2(v)/ in carrier sentences by speakers of American English (AE), Parisian French (PF), and North German (NG). Variables under examination are (1) immediate phonetic context (C1=b,d; C2=b,d,p,t), (2) sentence prominence (narrow focus versus ...
Winifred Strange +4 more
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This project investigates the acoustic variability of vowels produced in multisyllabic nonsense words /cvC1VC2(v)/ in carrier sentences by speakers of American English (AE), Parisian French (PF), and North German (NG). Variables under examination are (1) immediate phonetic context (C1=b,d; C2=b,d,p,t), (2) sentence prominence (narrow focus versus ...
Winifred Strange +4 more
openaire +1 more source

