![]() Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie detailed bibliographic data are available on the internet at. Corrigan Bernd Kortmann Volume 10 Michael Newman New York City English ISBN 978-1-61451-289-9 e-ISBN (PDF) 978-1-61451-212-7 e-ISBN (EPUB) 978-1-5015-0060-2 ISSN 2164-7445 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A CIP catalog record for this book has been applied for at the Library of Congress. Michael Newman New York City English Dialects of English Editors Joan C. ![]() ![]() Table of contents : Contents 1 Introduction 1.1 New York City English and the approach taken in this book 1.2 The data used 1.3 What non-specialists need to know 1.3.1 Variationist studies 1.3.2 Appreciating NYCE 1.3.3 Comprehending NYCE 2 Geography demography and cultural factors 2.1 The New York City Dialect Region 2.2 Social Class and Prestige 2.3 A City of Immigrants 2.4 Racial and Ethnic Identities 2.4.1 Racial nomenclature 2.4.2 Defining race 2.4.3 How New Yorkers define race 2.4.4 Sociolinguistic treatments of race and ethnicity 2.4.5 New Yorkers’ associations of race and variation 2.4.6 Racial Segregation and Dialect Development and Preservation 3 Phonetics and Phonology 3.1 I coulda been a contenda 3.2 (r): the fourth floor 3.3 Vowels 3.3.1 The short-A split 3.3.2 The low-back system: “Send a Salami to Your Boy in the Army” 3.3.3 Two Diphthongs or Three? 3.3.4 Back and Front Upgliding Vowels 3.3.5 Other conditioned patterns 3.4 Consonants 3.4.1 Dis and dat: (dh) and (th) 3.4.2 Other Racially Differentiated Consonants 3.4.3 Hubbell’s inventory 3.4.4 Consonant clusters 3.5 Suprasegmental Factors 3.6 Conclusion 4 Morphology and Syntax 4.1 Background 4.2 Regional NYCE features 4.2.1 Morphology 4.2.2 Syntax 4.3 Internal Ethnic-based Variation 4.3.1 African American English 4.3.2 Spanish calques: No longer devil-owned 4.3.3 Goyim can’t say that: Jewish English 4.4 Summary: Contact and Future Research 5 Discourse Factors 5.1 Background 5.2 New York Jewish Conversational Style 5.3 Research on African American Communicative Genres 5.4 Bilingual Repertoires: Language Contact in New York 5.5 Further Research 6 Lexicon 6.1 Background 6.2 Immigrant Contributions 6.2.1 Yiddishisms 6.2.2 Lexical contributions from other languages 6.3 Words Original to NYCE 6.4 Racial Factors 6.4.1 Racial Variation 6.4.2 The N-word 6.4.3 The city divided 6.5 Glocal Words in New York and beyond 7 The History and Study of NYCE 7.1 Early NYCE 7.1.1 Origins 7.1.2 Early Evolution of NYCE 7.2 Research on NYCE and Recent Developments 7.2.1 Labov’s Social Stratification of English in New York City 7.2.2 Research since SSENYC 8 Conclusion 8.1 New York City English and Prominence of Race 8.2 The Sociolinguistics of Diversity and Superdiversity 9 Appendix A: Short Biographical Descriptions of the BQ-16 10 Appendix B: Transcriptions of NYCE Speakers 10.1 Rashid Lewis 10.2 Gay Latinos: Kicked Out of Victoria’s Secret 10.3 Andy Sullivan and Laura Feldman 10.4 Johan Aranda References Index Citation preview ![]()
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