The Phonology of the Dialect of Hoylake, Cheshire

Description

A study of the dialect spoken in Hoylake, Cheshire. An introduction to the town is followed by five chapters which which give a descriptive account of the sounds of the dialect recorded in 1955, 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 1955, and present a tabular summary of Old English, Middle English, Scandinavian and Old French equivalents of stressed vowels in the Cheshire dialect. The first of two appendices contains an orthographic transcription of an excerpt taken from a gramophone disc recording of the collector's principal informant. The second appendix relates to the Hoylake fishing industry, and contains sections on the industry, types of boats, navigation and directions, apparatus, winds, weather and watches, tides and sea, moorings, nets, winches and fishing lines, fish, shellfish and birds, fishermen's clothing, fishing equipment, knots, ropes and twine. The technical terms contained within these sections are recorded phonetically, with explanatory notes provided by the collector. Photographs and line drawings are also included within this appendix.

Metadata

Identifier vj5yk5kb
IRN 410256
Class Mark LAVC/SRP/2/220
Level File
Type of Record Archives - ISAD(G)
Peristent Link http://prototype1.library.leeds.ac.uk/vj5yk5kb
Collection(s) Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture
Category Archive
Parent Record Undergraduate Dissertations
Creator(s) Walters, Gillian S
Date 1955
Size and Medium vi, 148 bound ms. leaves; 10 b/w photographs.

Related Records