Thesis Abstract and Dissertation Abstracts


 Abstracts   Science   Engineering   I.T.   Architecture & Civil   Education   Arts   Accounts & Econ   Laws   Other Categories 

Inter- and Intra-Speaker Variation in Liverpool English: A Sociophonetic Study

Thesis Abstract by Dr Catherine Sangster from
Date Submitted: Feb 1, 2007, 20:00

D.Phil., University of Oxford, 2002

Inter- and Intra-Speaker Variation in Liverpool English: A Sociophonetic Study - Dissertation Abstracts Email Graphic Email abstract to a friend
Inter- and Intra-Speaker Variation in Liverpool English: A Sociophonetic Study - Thesis Abstracts  Printer Graphic Printer friendly page
Inter- and Intra-Speaker Variation in Liverpool English: A Sociophonetic Study - Dissertation Abstract  Contact Picture Contact Author of Abstract
        (only if email was submitted)

Dissertation Keywords: linguistics phonetics sociophonetics liverpool variation

This Thesis Abstract | Dissertation Abstract may be cited as follows:
Sangster, C. M. (2002). Inter- and Intra-Speaker Variation in Liverpool English: A Sociophonetic Study. D.Phil. Dissertation, University of Oxford

Thesis Abstract or Dissertation Abstract (Summary):
This thesis presents experiments and interviews which investigate pronunciation variation in the Liverpool accents of young speakers. Experiment One investigates inter-speaker variation, Experiment Two investigates intra-speaker variation, and Experiment Three investigates both inter- and intra-speaker variation. These three experiments are conducted from a sociophonetic perspective, with controlled elicitation of natural speech and acoustic analysis of speech data. The experimental investigations are complemented by interviews, which incorporate the perceptions and opinions of speakers of Liverpool English into the study. The study makes several contributions to the field of sociolinguistic research. It provides a new examination of Liverpool English. Experiment One is specifically designed to explore one of its most complex and ill-defined phonetic features, the realisation of plosives as affricates or fricatives. In addition to this phonetic investigation, Experiment One also examines sociolinguistic variation in this feature, and shows that speakers' individual attributes (such as their social networks and their plans for the future) are as relevant to variation as their socio-economic status. The study also makes important methodological contributions. Instrumental phonetic techniques and standards are successfully applied to sociolinguistic investigation conducted in the field. An interdisciplinary approach, bringing together qualitative interviews and sociophonetic experiments, is adopted. A new quiz-questionnaire technique for data collection, which should prove useful for many kinds of future sociolinguistic research, is developed for Experiment Three. Finally, Experiment Three tests many accounts and models of intra-speaker variation. Speakers are shown to vary their pronunciation as the speech situation varies, but not all the seven phonetic variables investigated show the same patterns of variation. Speakers vary their pronunciation according to audience, and also according to topic. Speakers with a high level of ambition vary their pronunciation of certain phonetic variables more than those with a lower level of ambition, and female speakers vary their pronunciation more than male speakers.




Great care has been taken to ensure that this information is correct, however ThesisAbstracts.com cannot accept responsibility for the contents of this page title "Inter- and Intra-Speaker Variation in Liverpool English: A Sociophonetic Study". This abstract has been submitted by Dr Catherine Sangster on Feb 1, 2007 20:00. © Copyright 2003 - 2006 of ThesisAbstracts.com and respective owners.

Search Thesis

 Advanced Search

  TOP | About | Contact Us - Suggestions | Home | Publish a Thesis Abstract Online
Last Updated: Apr 1st, 2007 - 14:59:09  
ThesisAbstracts.com © 2003-2006 Thesis Abstract & Dissertation Abstracts, All Rights Reserved.