A Descriptive and Historical Study of the Dialect of Netherton

Description

A study of the dialect spoken in the Worcestershire village of Netherton, based on data collected through fieldwork interviews with six local people. An introduction to the village, the informants and the fieldwork methodology, is followed by five chapters which present a descriptive account of sounds in the modern dialect, the development of Middle English sounds (in stressed and unstressed syllables), a tabular summary of equivalents in the dialect to the stressed vowels of Middle English, Old English and other sources, and the development of consonantal sounds from the Old and Middle English periods to 1978. An Appendix contains a collection of newspaper cuttings (all undated) from the 'Black Country Bugle', relating to local characters, local industry (mining and chain making), leisure activities (pigeon fancying) and Black Country tradition and pride (pig killing, song, dialect). Reference is made in the Introduction to tape recordings of the informants, but no such items were submitted with the study.

Metadata

Identifier btz4wr2g
IRN 410342
Class Mark LAVC/SRP/2/306
Level File
Type of Record Archives - ISAD(G)
Peristent Link http://prototype1.library.leeds.ac.uk/btz4wr2g
Collection(s) Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture
Category Archive
Parent Record Undergraduate Dissertations
Creator(s) Perrott, Valerie
Date 1978
Size and Medium iv, 124 bound ms. leaves.

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