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http://www.pittsburghese.com - an interactive site, no longer maintained, on which people contributed items they consider to be "Pittsburghese." Also includes a video demonstration. Because anyone could contribute and because the explanations on the site are humorous, this is not an authoritative source of information about Pittsburgh speech. It is an interesting source of data and ideas for research, however. Various other on-line discussions and dictionaries of "Pittsburghese," for the most part probably not based on scholarly research, are: http://www.sesraw.com/Birdra/pitt.htm http://www.carnegielibrary.org/subject/pgh/pittsburghese.html http://pittsburgh.about.com/library/weekly/aa071200a.htm Researched Web Sources about American Dialects and Linguisticshttp://www.americandialect.org
- home page of the American Dialect Society. http://www.linguistlist.org/ - home page of the LINGUIST list, the largest Internet resource for all areas of linguistics. http://us.english.uga.edu/ - home page of the archive of the Linguistic Atlas of the General Print Sources on Dialects of American English Ferguson , C. A., & Heath, S. B. (eds.). (1981). Language in the U.S.A. New York: Cambridge University Press. [an anthology of scholarly articles on varieties of American English] Finegan, E. , & Rickford, J.(eds.). 2004. Language in the USA: Themes for the twenty-first century. New York: Cambridge University Press. [an updated, expanded sequel to Ferguson and Heath 1981 (see above) Marckwardt, A. H. (1980 [1958]). American English ( J. L. Dillard, Ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. [dated but good on early history] MacNeil, R.and W. Cran (2004). Do You Speak American? New York: Doubleday. [general audience; companion to PBS documentary “Do You Speak American?” McCrum, R., Cran, W., & MacNeil, R. (1986). The story of English. New York: Viking. [general audience; companion to PBS “Story of English” series Wolfram, W., & Schilling-Estes, N. (2005). American English: Dialects and varieties, 2 nd ed.. New York: Blackwell. [up- to-date overview textbook] Wolfram, W., & Ward, Ben., eds. (2005). American voices: How dialects differ from coast to coast. Malden, MA: Blackwell. [general audience: a collection of articles on regional dialects that originally appeared in Language Magazine, a publication for teachers.] Print
Sources on Brown,
C. (1982). A search for sound change: A look at the lowering of tense
vowels before liquids in the Gagnon,
C. L. (1999). Language attitudes in *Gilmore,
P. (1999). "Scots-Irish" words from Hankey,
C. T. (1965). Miscellany: "Tiger," "Tagger," and [aI] in western Hankey,
C. T. (1972). Notes on Johnson,
B. L. (1971). The *Johnstone,
B. (2002). Language and place: "Pittsburghese." Western Pennsylvania
History, 85(1), p. 46. [how local speech enters into local identity
in Pittsburgh] Johnstone, B. (2007) Discursive sources of linguistic diversity: Stancetaking and vernacular non-formation, in: Y. Matsumoto, D. Oshima, O. Robinson & P. Sells (Eds) Diversity and Universals in Language: Perspectives and Implications, pp. 167-196 (Palo Alto, CA, Center for the Study of Language and Social Interaction, Stanford University). Johnstone, B. (2007) A new role for narrative in variationist sociolinguistics, in: M. Bamberg (Ed) Narrative: State of the Art, pp. 57-67 (Amsterdam/Philadelphia, John Benjamins). Johnstone, B. (2007) Linking identity and dialect through stancetaking, in: R Englebretson (Ed) Stancetaking in Discourse: Subjectivity in Interaction, pp. 49-68 (Amsterdam, Philadelphia, John Benjamins). Johnstone, B., Andrus, J. & Danielson, A. (2006) Mobility, indexicality, and the enregisterment of "Pittsburghese," Journal of English Linguistics, 34(2), 77-104. Johnstone,
B., & Baumgardt, D. (2004). "Pittsburghese" Online: Vernacular
Norming in Conversation Johnstone,
B., Bhasin, N., & Wittkofski, D. (2002). "Dahntahn Pittsburgh": Monopthongal
/aw/ and representations of localness in southwestern Johnstone, B., & Kiesling, S.F. (2008). Indexicality and experience: exploring the meanings of /aw/-monophthongization in Pittsburgh. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 12: 5-33. Kurath,
H. (1945). German relics in Pennsylvania English.
Monatsheft für deutsche Unterricht, 37, 76-102. Kurath,
H. (1949). A word geography of the eastern United States. Kurath,
H., & McDavid, R. I. (1961). The pronunciation of English in the
Atlantic states. Maxfield,
E. K. (1931). The speech of South-Western Pennsylvania.
American Speech, 6, 18-20.
[mentions questions ‘rising when one would expect [them] to
fall, and descending at the most unexpected places.’] McElhinny,
B. (1999). More on the third dialect of English: Linguistic constraints
on the use of three phonological variables in Tenny,
C. (1998). Psych verbs and verbal passives in Pittsburghese. Linguistics,
36 , 591-597. [syntax
of the needs + past participle construction] Tucker,
R. W. (1934). Linguistic substrata in Educational
Films about American Dialects “Do You Speak American?” (MacNeill-Lehrer productions in association with WNET). PBS Home Video, 2005. 3 videocasettes or enhanced DVDs. From the PBS website: “Journalist and author Robert MacNeil zigzags cross-country to explore how Americans use the language today, how it's developing and how people feel about it.” The
Story of English. (a BBC TV co-production with MacNeil-Lehrer Productions
in association with WNET). Public
Media Video, c1986. [5
videocassettes: An English speaking world (58 min.). Mother tongue (57
min.) A muse of fire (58 min.). The guid Scots tongue (58 min.). Black
on white (58 min.). Pioneers! O Pioneers! (58 min.) Muvver tongue (58
min.). The loaded weapon (57 min.)
Next year's
words, a look into the future (58 min.).
Details the history of the English language and provides a unique
focus on current English usage worldwide with a special emphasis on American
English. Some are better than others; Black on White
presents only one side of the debate about the origins of
African-American speech features] American
Tongues, by Andrew Kolker
and Louis Alvarez. Center
for New American Media 1986.
[somewhat dated but excellent film about regional and social dialects
and attitudes about them] |