So You Think You Speak Canadian English: A Study of Language Regard and Lexical Variation of English-Speaking Canadians

To date there has been limited research into the language regard of Canadians towards the varieties of English spoken across this vast country. This thesis provides a comprehensive investigation of the language regard of English-speaking Canadians towards varieties of Canadian English, alongside a v...

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Main Author: Freake, Yvette Marie
Other Authors: Hoffman, Michol
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10315/41040
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spelling ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/41040 2023-06-06T11:56:44+02:00 So You Think You Speak Canadian English: A Study of Language Regard and Lexical Variation of English-Speaking Canadians Freake, Yvette Marie Hoffman, Michol 2023-03-28T21:23:28Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10315/41040 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10315/41040 Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests. Sociolinguistics Canadian English Language regard Language variation Lexical variation Language attitudes Perceptual dialectology Linguistics Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2023 ftyorkuniv 2023-04-15T23:01:58Z To date there has been limited research into the language regard of Canadians towards the varieties of English spoken across this vast country. This thesis provides a comprehensive investigation of the language regard of English-speaking Canadians towards varieties of Canadian English, alongside a variationist study of 13 previously studied lexical variables and 10 new lexical variables. This research on perception complements previous work on production, to build a better understanding of sociolinguistic variation (see Kretzschmar, 2000 and Preston, 2018). The methodology provides insights into the use of an online map task with the current available tools, while addressing the strength and weaknesses of these tools. An online survey allowed for data to be gathered from all areas of Canada and for simultaneous collection and analysis of lexical and perceptual data. This study includes a content analysis using GIS technology; an analysis of rating tasks for regions on three characteristics: correctness, pleasantness, and similarity; an experimental rating task focusing on stereotypes of provinces; supplementary perceptual data; and a lexical variation component. Data from 192 completed lexical surveys were analyzed using total variation, net variation, and major isoglosses to help further develop the understanding of the sociolinguistic landscape of Canadian English. Findings suggest that Canadians from different regions harbour perceptions towards Canadian English based on their region of origin, with some areas (e.g., Newfoundland and Labrador, and Québec) appearing more salient to participants than others. The findings from the analysis of the lexical data echo previous findings (e.g., Boberg, 2010, 2016; Gallinger & Motskin, 2018) while also highlighting regional variation in some variables that have not previously been studied, suggesting further research is needed focusing on these variables. Overall, the results demonstrate the advantages and disadvantages of an online study to survey a large number ... Thesis Newfoundland York University, Toronto: YorkSpace Newfoundland Canada Boberg ENVELOPE(22.034,22.034,69.974,69.974)
institution Open Polar
collection York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
op_collection_id ftyorkuniv
language English
topic Sociolinguistics
Canadian English
Language regard
Language variation
Lexical variation
Language attitudes
Perceptual dialectology
Linguistics
spellingShingle Sociolinguistics
Canadian English
Language regard
Language variation
Lexical variation
Language attitudes
Perceptual dialectology
Linguistics
Freake, Yvette Marie
So You Think You Speak Canadian English: A Study of Language Regard and Lexical Variation of English-Speaking Canadians
topic_facet Sociolinguistics
Canadian English
Language regard
Language variation
Lexical variation
Language attitudes
Perceptual dialectology
Linguistics
description To date there has been limited research into the language regard of Canadians towards the varieties of English spoken across this vast country. This thesis provides a comprehensive investigation of the language regard of English-speaking Canadians towards varieties of Canadian English, alongside a variationist study of 13 previously studied lexical variables and 10 new lexical variables. This research on perception complements previous work on production, to build a better understanding of sociolinguistic variation (see Kretzschmar, 2000 and Preston, 2018). The methodology provides insights into the use of an online map task with the current available tools, while addressing the strength and weaknesses of these tools. An online survey allowed for data to be gathered from all areas of Canada and for simultaneous collection and analysis of lexical and perceptual data. This study includes a content analysis using GIS technology; an analysis of rating tasks for regions on three characteristics: correctness, pleasantness, and similarity; an experimental rating task focusing on stereotypes of provinces; supplementary perceptual data; and a lexical variation component. Data from 192 completed lexical surveys were analyzed using total variation, net variation, and major isoglosses to help further develop the understanding of the sociolinguistic landscape of Canadian English. Findings suggest that Canadians from different regions harbour perceptions towards Canadian English based on their region of origin, with some areas (e.g., Newfoundland and Labrador, and Québec) appearing more salient to participants than others. The findings from the analysis of the lexical data echo previous findings (e.g., Boberg, 2010, 2016; Gallinger & Motskin, 2018) while also highlighting regional variation in some variables that have not previously been studied, suggesting further research is needed focusing on these variables. Overall, the results demonstrate the advantages and disadvantages of an online study to survey a large number ...
author2 Hoffman, Michol
format Thesis
author Freake, Yvette Marie
author_facet Freake, Yvette Marie
author_sort Freake, Yvette Marie
title So You Think You Speak Canadian English: A Study of Language Regard and Lexical Variation of English-Speaking Canadians
title_short So You Think You Speak Canadian English: A Study of Language Regard and Lexical Variation of English-Speaking Canadians
title_full So You Think You Speak Canadian English: A Study of Language Regard and Lexical Variation of English-Speaking Canadians
title_fullStr So You Think You Speak Canadian English: A Study of Language Regard and Lexical Variation of English-Speaking Canadians
title_full_unstemmed So You Think You Speak Canadian English: A Study of Language Regard and Lexical Variation of English-Speaking Canadians
title_sort so you think you speak canadian english: a study of language regard and lexical variation of english-speaking canadians
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/10315/41040
long_lat ENVELOPE(22.034,22.034,69.974,69.974)
geographic Newfoundland
Canada
Boberg
geographic_facet Newfoundland
Canada
Boberg
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10315/41040
op_rights Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
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