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Dialect Contact: From Speaker to Community-Based Perspectives [Hardback]

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New research expands the linguistic understanding of dialect contact in specific communities and individuals

Dialect contact occurs whenever speakers of mutually intelligible language varieties interact. Many linguists are interested in the outcome of such contact—how it leads people and languages to vary and change, and what such patterns can reveal about language, mind, and society. Dialect contact can thus be approached as an individual-level or a community-level phenomenon; a cognitive process or a social one.

In Dialect Contact, international contributors present studies touching on both perspectives, representing languages and varieties spanning five continents. The chapters shed light on the many factors influencing dialect change and highlight the importance of considering the contact dynamics that are specific to individual people and communities.

This book will benefit sociolinguistics scholars and students interested in the outcomes of dialect contact, the implications of contact for understanding language change, and the various methods used to investigate contact effects in individuals and communities.

Chapter 1: A Multi-level Approach to Understanding the Dynamics of
Dialect Contact
Vķctor Fernįndez-Mallat and Jennifer Nycz

Chapter 2: Dialect Leveling and Supralocalization in a Rural Community:
Generational Change from 7:35 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in Ricote
Laura Torrano-Moreno and Juan M. Hernįndez-Campoy

Chapter 3: Da isch einfach eine Sehnsucht danach 'There is simply a longing
for it': Indexicalities of dialect convergence and renewal in Swabian
Karen V. Beaman

Chapter 4: Focusing and Feature Complexity in Amman Arabic
Enam Al-Wer and Areej Al-Hawamdeh

Chapter 5: Unwitting Convergence: Kolokwa and Liberian Settler English
Allison Shapp, Michael Marinaccio, and John Victor Singler

Chapter 6: The Relative Acquirability of Different Types of Dialect Features
by Mobile Speakers of Korean
Yoojin Kang

Chapter 7: Interaction, Confounding Effect, and Collinearity in the Analysis
of Brazilian Internal Migrants' Speech
Livia Oushiro

Chapter 8: On the (Non-)Uniformity of Contact Outcomes: A Comparison of
Spanish in New York City and Boston
Daniel Erker

Chapter 9: T-Flapping in Singapore English: Americanization, Innovation, or
Both?
Wesley Mark Lincoln and Rebecca Lurie Starr

Chapter 10: Making Things Easier: The Pragmatism behind Second Dialect
Acquisition
Abby Walker

Contributors
Index
Vķctor Fernįndez-Mallat is an associate professor in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Georgetown University. He is an editor of Linguistic Landscapes and Educational Spaces (2021) and has published articles in journals like the Journal of Pragmatics and Intercultural Pragmatics. Jennifer Nycz is an associate professor in the Department of Linguistics at Georgetown University. She is the author of Second Dialect Acquisition: Theory and Methods (2015).