Phonological individuation in a former Danish settlement in South Dakota, USA

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Phonological individuation in a former Danish settlement in South Dakota, USA. / Heegård, Jan.

I: Journal of Germanic Linguistics, Bind 30, Nr. 2, 18.04.2018, s. 95-130.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Heegård, J 2018, 'Phonological individuation in a former Danish settlement in South Dakota, USA', Journal of Germanic Linguistics, bind 30, nr. 2, s. 95-130. <https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-germanic-linguistics/article/phonological-individuation-in-a-former-danish-settlement-in-south-dakota-usa/283AC0D9B531108F0EED1E431EE4A3D1>

APA

Heegård, J. (2018). Phonological individuation in a former Danish settlement in South Dakota, USA. Journal of Germanic Linguistics, 30(2), 95-130. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-germanic-linguistics/article/phonological-individuation-in-a-former-danish-settlement-in-south-dakota-usa/283AC0D9B531108F0EED1E431EE4A3D1

Vancouver

Heegård J. Phonological individuation in a former Danish settlement in South Dakota, USA. Journal of Germanic Linguistics. 2018 apr. 18;30(2):95-130.

Author

Heegård, Jan. / Phonological individuation in a former Danish settlement in South Dakota, USA. I: Journal of Germanic Linguistics. 2018 ; Bind 30, Nr. 2. s. 95-130.

Bibtex

@article{41183516a1704d678f897c716ab0df27,
title = "Phonological individuation in a former Danish settlement in South Dakota, USA",
abstract = "The article describes the manifestation and distribution of 15 phonological variables in a rural heritage language community in South Dakota, USA. I discuss to what extent dialect convergence has occurred in this former Danish settlement. The data sample encompasses speakers born in Northwest Jutland in Denmark, as well as speakers born in South Dakota to parents who emigrated from Northwest Jutland. The analysis shows that dialectal convergence has not occurred to any significant degree, in spite of what may be expected; speakers born in South Dakota have significantly more dialectal features in their speech than the speakers born in Denmark. The analysis also reveals a sizeable degree of inter-speaker variation within both groups, as well as a considerable variation between the variables with respect to how likely they are to be realized dialectally versus nondialectally. The results are discussed in relation to theories of shared linguistic repertoire and individuation in small speech communities.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Danish dialect, Northwest Jutish, heritage language, multi-factorial regression analysis, interspeaker variation",
author = "Jan Heeg{\aa}rd",
note = ";",
year = "2018",
month = apr,
day = "18",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "95--130",
journal = "Journal of Germanic Linguistics",
issn = "1470-5427",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Phonological individuation in a former Danish settlement in South Dakota, USA

AU - Heegård, Jan

N1 - ;

PY - 2018/4/18

Y1 - 2018/4/18

N2 - The article describes the manifestation and distribution of 15 phonological variables in a rural heritage language community in South Dakota, USA. I discuss to what extent dialect convergence has occurred in this former Danish settlement. The data sample encompasses speakers born in Northwest Jutland in Denmark, as well as speakers born in South Dakota to parents who emigrated from Northwest Jutland. The analysis shows that dialectal convergence has not occurred to any significant degree, in spite of what may be expected; speakers born in South Dakota have significantly more dialectal features in their speech than the speakers born in Denmark. The analysis also reveals a sizeable degree of inter-speaker variation within both groups, as well as a considerable variation between the variables with respect to how likely they are to be realized dialectally versus nondialectally. The results are discussed in relation to theories of shared linguistic repertoire and individuation in small speech communities.

AB - The article describes the manifestation and distribution of 15 phonological variables in a rural heritage language community in South Dakota, USA. I discuss to what extent dialect convergence has occurred in this former Danish settlement. The data sample encompasses speakers born in Northwest Jutland in Denmark, as well as speakers born in South Dakota to parents who emigrated from Northwest Jutland. The analysis shows that dialectal convergence has not occurred to any significant degree, in spite of what may be expected; speakers born in South Dakota have significantly more dialectal features in their speech than the speakers born in Denmark. The analysis also reveals a sizeable degree of inter-speaker variation within both groups, as well as a considerable variation between the variables with respect to how likely they are to be realized dialectally versus nondialectally. The results are discussed in relation to theories of shared linguistic repertoire and individuation in small speech communities.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Danish dialect

KW - Northwest Jutish

KW - heritage language

KW - multi-factorial regression analysis

KW - interspeaker variation

M3 - Journal article

VL - 30

SP - 95

EP - 130

JO - Journal of Germanic Linguistics

JF - Journal of Germanic Linguistics

SN - 1470-5427

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 162186305