Welsh dialect classifications
Abstract: Native speakers of Welsh are well aware of geographical variation in features of the language, and are able to tell where people come from by listening to the way they speak. Welsh dialectologists have over the years looked at geographical variation in phonology, lexis and grammatical forms and have tried to establish where changes between different features are located. They have shown relatively little interest, however, in defining distinct regional dialects, and dividing the country into separate speech areas. This paper will look at those attempts which have been made in the frameworks of isoglottic dialectology, by John Rhŷs in 1897 and by Alan Thomas in 1973 and 1980
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References
•Book
Language,Economy and Society: The Changing Fortunes of the Welsh Language in the Twentieth Century
John Aitchison,Harold Carter +1 more
- 25 Feb 2000
TL;DR: A Geography of the Welsh Language 1961-1991 as mentioned in this paper is an updated and extended version of the book previously published under the title "A Geographical Atlas of Welsh Languages 1961 -1991".
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