31 p. : il. -- Bibliogr.: p. 29-31English has been present on the Emerald Island since about the 13th century, making Irish English the oldest of the vernacular varieties outside Britain. The purpose of this paper is to describe the conditions of the shift process from the former vernacular language – Irish Gaelic – to the input language – English – and present some of the most distinctive linguistic features, focusing on the phonology and grammar of the English dialect used in the Republic of Ireland as a linguistic area. With this aim in mind, the paper will introduce some of the terms that has been used to refer to this particular variety – Anglo-Irish, Hiberno English and Irish English – and explain the reasons for the selection of the ...
Conventional wisdom since the earliest studies of Irish English has attributed much of what is disti...
Dialogue between Middle English and Irish takes two principal linguistic and literary forms. A body ...
This paper explores the case of Ireland as an <em>anti-litteram </em>postcolonial contex...
Irish English, as the oldest overseas variety of English, displays a number features which are uniqu...
The history of the English language in Ireland is long and complex; one which, until recently at lea...
The current chapter is intended as an overview of the main focus of research on Irish English to dat...
Every realisation of speech differs amongst the speakers of a given language. There are many factors...
Irish traces can be found in many countries all over the world. Despite heavy emigration, Irish infl...
The present situation of the Irish language is that of a language which is currently and commonly us...
The Irish language has been the main but never the sole means of communication on the island of Irel...
To date no sociolinguistic study has addressed the issues around language contact in Ireland between...
International audienceThis volume brings together current research by international scholars on the ...
This is the first book to carefully analyze the linguistic conventions associated with Irish English...
English has been spoken in Ireland since the twelfth-century Norman invasion, which also brought in ...
The Anglo-Irish language is a generic term to deal with the English as spoken in the four provinces ...
Conventional wisdom since the earliest studies of Irish English has attributed much of what is disti...
Dialogue between Middle English and Irish takes two principal linguistic and literary forms. A body ...
This paper explores the case of Ireland as an <em>anti-litteram </em>postcolonial contex...
Irish English, as the oldest overseas variety of English, displays a number features which are uniqu...
The history of the English language in Ireland is long and complex; one which, until recently at lea...
The current chapter is intended as an overview of the main focus of research on Irish English to dat...
Every realisation of speech differs amongst the speakers of a given language. There are many factors...
Irish traces can be found in many countries all over the world. Despite heavy emigration, Irish infl...
The present situation of the Irish language is that of a language which is currently and commonly us...
The Irish language has been the main but never the sole means of communication on the island of Irel...
To date no sociolinguistic study has addressed the issues around language contact in Ireland between...
International audienceThis volume brings together current research by international scholars on the ...
This is the first book to carefully analyze the linguistic conventions associated with Irish English...
English has been spoken in Ireland since the twelfth-century Norman invasion, which also brought in ...
The Anglo-Irish language is a generic term to deal with the English as spoken in the four provinces ...
Conventional wisdom since the earliest studies of Irish English has attributed much of what is disti...
Dialogue between Middle English and Irish takes two principal linguistic and literary forms. A body ...
This paper explores the case of Ireland as an <em>anti-litteram </em>postcolonial contex...