An Account of the Phonology of the Living Dialect of Warley in the West Riding of Yorkshire

Description

A study of the dialect spoken in the village of Warley Town, in the old West Riding of Yorkshire. Data was collected from five local informants, interviewed over three periods in 1959 and 1960. An introduction to the village and the informants is followed by five chapters which present a descriptive account of the sounds of the Warley dialect recorded in 1959-1960, describe the development of Middle English sounds in the living dialect (vowels of stressed and unstressed syllables), describe changes in consonantal sounds from the Old and Middle English periods down to 1960, and present a tabular summary of Old English, Middle English, Old Norse and Old French equivalents of the stressed vowels in the Warley dialect. Two appendices contain information on the Definite Article, and orthographic and phonetic transcriptions of sample speech recorded by the collector. These include descriptions of a side-oven, Plot Night (November 5th) and the words of a song sung by the informant on that night, a skipping rhyme and pea and pie saloons in Halifax. A list of surnames and place names, recorded phonetically, and a Word List are also included. Photographs and a postcard print show views of the village [undated].

Metadata

Identifier rm22zqgk
IRN 410278
Class Mark LAVC/SRP/2/242
Level File
Type of Record Archives - ISAD(G)
Peristent Link http://prototype1.library.leeds.ac.uk/rm22zqgk
Collection(s) Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture
Category Archive
Parent Record Undergraduate Dissertations
Creator(s) Handscombe, Brenda
Date 1961
Size and Medium xiv, 123 bound ms. leaves; 2 b/w photographs.

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