Bookbot

Julia Davydova

    The present perfect in non-native Englishes
    Quotation in Indigenised and Learner English
    • Quotation in Indigenised and Learner English

      A Sociolinguistic Account of Variation

      • 268 stránok
      • 10 hodin čítania

      The book explores the dynamic evolution of quotative marking in modern English, particularly the emergence of new variants like "be like." It examines how younger speakers in non-Anglophone regions incorporate this feature into their second-language English. The study highlights the role of the younger generation in reshaping language use, focusing on their adaptation and appropriation of these linguistic changes across diverse cultural contexts.

      Quotation in Indigenised and Learner English
    • The present perfect in non-native Englishes

      • 340 stránok
      • 12 hodin čítania

      This is an innovative study of variation among linguistic items in what has been traditionally described as present perfect contexts. The study offers analyses of new data sets taken from an interestingly diverse set of non-native Englishes. While comprising traditional second-language varieties such as Indian English, Singapore English, East African English in the investigation of the present perfect, the study extends its scope to cover learner varieties of English spoken in Russia and Germany. The author takes her reader on an amazing variationist journey around the globe, revealing chapter after chapter the commonalities and differences in the patterns of use of the English present perfect and, finally, developing a comprehensive perspective allowing for robust generalisations across numerous data sets. Moreover, empirical data serves as a baseline for taking a stand on a number of currently debated issues in variationist sociolinguistics, research on second language acquisition as well as research on linguistic complexity. Thus operating on the interface of various linguistic paradigms, the book addresses a vast audience including students of linguistics and researchers with various fields of specialization.

      The present perfect in non-native Englishes