A Phonology of the Dialect of Greyabbey, County Down

Description

A study of the dialect spoken in the village of Greyabbey in Northern Ireland, based on interviews with three local informants. An introduction to the village and its environs is followed by four chapters which present a descriptive account of the phonology of the modern dialect of Greyabbey, describe the development of Middle English vowels in stressed syllables in the dialect, the development of the Middle English consonant system, and a tabular summary of Old English, Middle English, Old Norse and Old French equivalents of the stressed vowels of the Greyabbey dialect. Eight appendices contain a photocopied article, 'The Emergence of Ulster as a Distinct Dialect Area', by G. B. Adams (from 'Ulster Folklife' IV, 1958), notes on related grammar and phonology, a photocopied map of the dialect regions of Ulster by G. B. Adams, a photocopied map of the dialect regions of Scotland, from 'The Scottish National Dictionary'(Edinburgh, 1934), a sketch map showing the relative locations of the phonologies referred to in the study, a photocopy of part of Sheet 4 of the Ordnance Survey map of Northern Ireland, notes on the arrival of English in Ulster (with dates), and a photocopied extract from Sam Lewis's 'Topographical Dictionary of Ireland' (Dublin, 1837).

Metadata

Identifier djyf2h2k
IRN 410306
Class Mark LAVC/SRP/2/270
Level File
Type of Record Archives - ISAD(G)
Peristent Link http://prototype1.library.leeds.ac.uk/djyf2h2k
Collection(s) Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture
Category Archive
Parent Record Undergraduate Dissertations
Creator(s) McKeown, Roy
Date 1971
Size and Medium xxviii, 206 bound ms. leaves.

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