Helenore; or, the fortunate Shepherdess: a Poem in the Broad Scoth Dialect
Author : Alexander Ross
Publisher :
Page : 338 pages
File Size : 33,63 MB
Release : 1866
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ISBN :
Author : Alexander Ross
Publisher :
Page : 338 pages
File Size : 33,63 MB
Release : 1866
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Author : Alexander ROSS (Schoolmaster at Lochlee.)
Publisher :
Page : 108 pages
File Size : 12,51 MB
Release : 1842
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Author : Alexander I Ross
Publisher :
Page : 334 pages
File Size : 18,21 MB
Release : 1868
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Author : Rev. Walter W. Skeat, M.A., and J. H. Nodal
Publisher :
Page : 234 pages
File Size : 21,76 MB
Release : 1877
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Author : Alexander Ross
Publisher :
Page : 184 pages
File Size : 33,51 MB
Release : 1778
Category : Songs, Scots
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Author : English Dialect Society
Publisher :
Page : 248 pages
File Size : 12,48 MB
Release : 1873
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Author : Walter William Skeat
Publisher :
Page : 214 pages
File Size : 31,13 MB
Release : 1877
Category : English language
ISBN :
Author : Walter William Skeat
Publisher :
Page : 438 pages
File Size : 28,85 MB
Release : 1877
Category : English language
ISBN :
Author : Daniel DeWispelare
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 344 pages
File Size : 15,14 MB
Release : 2017-05-08
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN : 0812249097
Daniel DeWispelare documents how many varieties of English became sidelined as "dialects" as Standard English became dominant throughout an ever-expanding English-speaking world, while asserting the importance of both multilingualism and dialect writing to eighteenth-century anglophone culture.
Author : Alex Broadhead
Publisher : Bucknell University Press
Page : 253 pages
File Size : 17,76 MB
Release : 2013-11-22
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1611485290
This monograph offers a radical reconceptualization of the relationship between the poetics and practice of Robert Burns and reevaluates the nature of his role in the history of Scots. By drawing on ideas from twenty-first-century sociolinguistic theory, it seeks to transform the debate surrounding Burns’s language. Through a series of readings that explore the way in which Burns used and commented on the styles associated with different places, groups and genres, it demonstrates how languages, places, and the identities associated with both are, in Burns’s writing, subject to continual reinvention. In this respect, the study breaks with existing accounts of the subject, insofar as it presents Scots, English and the other languages used by Burns not as fixed, empirically-observable entities, but as ideas that were revised and remade through the poet’s work. Focusing on Burns’s poems, songs, letters, prefaces, and glossaries, the book pays special attention to the complex ways in which the author engaged with such issues as phonology, grammar, and the naming of languages. The Burns who emerges from this book is not the marginal figure of traditional accounts—an under-educated poet alienated from the philological mainstream—but rather a well-informed thinker who, more than any other contemporary writer, embodies the creative linguistic spirit of the eighteenth century.