The Phonology of the Living Dialect of Hargrave

Description

A study of the dialect spoken in the village of Hargrave, Northamptonshire, based on one informant's responses to questions from the Dieth-Orton Questionnaire, and an analysis of a tape recording of the same speaker, made by the collector in April 1962. An introduction to the village and the informant, Frank Gates, is followed by chapters describing the sounds of the dialect, and the development of Middle English vowels in the Hargrave dialect (vowels of stressed syllables). The second part of the study contains responses to the Dieth-Orton Questionnaire (books I-IX), recorded phonetically, and orthographic and phonetic transcriptions of the tape-recorded speech of the informant (copied onto a gramophone disc, and presented with the study). Appendices present information on the making of shoes, a typical cowhouse stall and ploughing (all accompanied by pencil drawings, labelled phonetically). The first side of the disc recording contains Mr. Gates' description of how he would plough the shape of field presented to him in diagrammatic form (Appendix C) by the collector. The final appendix contains a transcribed extract from a tape recording made by Stanley Ellis in Little Harrowden in 1957. The orthographic and phonetic transcriptions are included as a comparison with the Hargrave dialect (Little Harrowden is eleven miles from Hargrave). A Word List, and photographs of the informant and the village, are included.

Metadata

Identifier wzl8x2l6
IRN 410286
Class Mark LAVC/SRP/2/250
Level File
Type of Record Archives - ISAD(G)
Peristent Link http://prototype1.library.leeds.ac.uk/wzl8x2l6
Collection(s) Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture
Category Archive
Parent Record Undergraduate Dissertations
Creator(s) Wilson, David S
Date 1963
Size and Medium xxiv, 109 bound ms. leaves; 9 b/w photographs.

Related Records