TY - JOUR
T1 - Individual differences in intra-speaker variation:
T2 - /t/-glottalling in England and Scotland
AU - Schleef, Erik
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Erik Schleef, published by De Gruyter.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This paper explores stylistic variation in the use of word-medial and word-final released and glottalled /t/ in London and Edinburgh. Specifically, it investigates the extent to which the social salience of a linguistic feature constrains individual differences in the degree and direction of intra-individual variation. Variation in the social salience of t-glottalling is explored in two linguistic contexts: word-medially, where it is high in London and somewhat lower in Edinburgh, and word-finally, where it is lower than in medial position in both places. Data is based on paired sociolinguistic interviews of 24 London-born adolescents and 21 Edinburgh-born adolescents. Results suggest that while style-shifting norms from speech to reading differ between London and Edinburgh adolescents, they are similar within the communities. However, there are many individual differences in the degree and direction of style-shifting and the latter are more pronounced in final position, where the social salience is weaker. There is also a somewhat large number of Edinburgh adolescents who diverge from the majority norm in medial position and who do not style-shift at all.
AB - This paper explores stylistic variation in the use of word-medial and word-final released and glottalled /t/ in London and Edinburgh. Specifically, it investigates the extent to which the social salience of a linguistic feature constrains individual differences in the degree and direction of intra-individual variation. Variation in the social salience of t-glottalling is explored in two linguistic contexts: word-medially, where it is high in London and somewhat lower in Edinburgh, and word-finally, where it is lower than in medial position in both places. Data is based on paired sociolinguistic interviews of 24 London-born adolescents and 21 Edinburgh-born adolescents. Results suggest that while style-shifting norms from speech to reading differ between London and Edinburgh adolescents, they are similar within the communities. However, there are many individual differences in the degree and direction of style-shifting and the latter are more pronounced in final position, where the social salience is weaker. There is also a somewhat large number of Edinburgh adolescents who diverge from the majority norm in medial position and who do not style-shift at all.
KW - adolescents
KW - Edinburgh English
KW - individual differences
KW - intra-speaker variation
KW - London English
KW - salience
KW - style
KW - t-glottalling
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85095421213&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/cbea0ce8-6906-3f3d-8c28-ef4143a9cbf0/
UR - https://resolver.obvsg.at/urn:nbn:at:at-ubs:3-20160
U2 - 10.1515/lingvan-2020-0033
DO - 10.1515/lingvan-2020-0033
M3 - Article
SN - 2199-174X
VL - 7
JO - Linguistics Vanguard
JF - Linguistics Vanguard
IS - S2
M1 - 20200033
ER -