The handbook of hispanic sociolinguistics / edited by Manuel Díaz-Campos

Colaborador(es): Diaz-Campos, ManuelTipo de material: TextoTextoDetalles de publicación: West Sussex : Wiley-Blackwell, 2011 Descripción: XXII, 793 p. : il. ; 26 cmISBN: 978-1-4051-9500-3Tema(s): SociolingüísticaResumen: INDICE: I. PHONOLOGICAL VARIATION 1. Laboratory approaches to sound variation and change Laura Colantoni, University of Toronto 2. Variationist Approaches: External Factors Conditioning Variation In Spanish Phonology Antonio Medina Rivera, Cleveland State University 3. Internal Factors Conditioning Variation In Spanish Phonology Francisco Moreno Fernandez, Universidad de Alcalá 4. Socio-phonological variation in Latin American Spanish John Lipski, Pennsylvania State University 5. Sociophonological variation and change in Spain Jose Antonio Samper Padilla, Universidad de las Palmas II. Morpho-Syntactic variation 6. Variationist Approaches to Spanish Morphosyntax: Internal and External Factors Scott Schwenter, Ohio State University 7. Variation and gramaticalization Rena Torres-Cacoullos, University of New Mexico 8. Morphosyntactic variation in Spanish speaking Latin America Mercedes Sedano and Paola Bentivoglio, Universidad Central de Venezuela 9. Morphosyntactic variation in Spain Maria Jose Serrano, University de La Laguna III. Language, the individual, and the society 10. Aging, Age, and Sociolinguistics Richard Cameron, University of Illinois, Chicago 11. Gender and variation: Word-final /s/ in men's and women's speech in Puerto Rico's western highlands Jonathan Holmquist, Temple University 12. Forms of address: The effect of the context Diane Uber, College of Wooster 13. Becoming a member of the speech community: Learning Socio-Phonetic Variation in child language Manuel Diaz-Campos, Indiana University 14. The relationship between historical linguistics and sociolinguistics Donald N. Tuten, Emory University, And Fernando Tejedo-Herrero, University Of Virginia 15. The acquisition of variation in second language Spanish: How to identify and catch a moving target Kimberly Geeslin, Indiana University IV. Spanish in contact 16. Spanish in contact with Quechua Ana Maria Escobar, University of Illinois 17. Spanish in contact with Guarani Shawn Gynan, Western Washington University 18. Spanish in Contact with Catalan Jose Luis Blas Arroyo, Universitat Jaume I 19. Spanish in contact with Portuguese: the case of Barranquenho J. Clancy Clements, Indiana University, Patrícia Amaral, Stanford University & Ana R. Luís, Universidade de Coimbra 20. Spanish in contact with Haitian Creole Luis A. Ortiz-Lopez, Universidad de Puerto Rico 21. Palenque (Colombia):multilingualism in an extraordinary social and historical context Armin Schwegler, University of California 22. Spanish in contact with Arabic Lofti Sayahi, The University at Albany V. Spanish in the USA, heritage language, L2 Spanish 23. Spanish in the US: Bilingual Discourse Markers Lourdes Torres, DePaul University 24. Functional adaptation and conceptual convergence in the analysis of language contact in the Spanish of bilingual communities in New York Ricardo Otheguy, City University of New York 25. Code-switching among US Latinos Almeida Jacqueline Toribio, P
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Monografías 06. BIBLIOTECA HUMANIDADES
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Bibliografía

INDICE: I. PHONOLOGICAL VARIATION 1. Laboratory approaches to sound variation and change Laura Colantoni, University of Toronto 2. Variationist Approaches: External Factors Conditioning Variation In Spanish Phonology Antonio Medina Rivera, Cleveland State University 3. Internal Factors Conditioning Variation In Spanish Phonology Francisco Moreno Fernandez, Universidad de Alcalá 4. Socio-phonological variation in Latin American Spanish John Lipski, Pennsylvania State University 5. Sociophonological variation and change in Spain Jose Antonio Samper Padilla, Universidad de las Palmas II. Morpho-Syntactic variation 6. Variationist Approaches to Spanish Morphosyntax: Internal and External Factors Scott Schwenter, Ohio State University 7. Variation and gramaticalization Rena Torres-Cacoullos, University of New Mexico 8. Morphosyntactic variation in Spanish speaking Latin America Mercedes Sedano and Paola Bentivoglio, Universidad Central de Venezuela 9. Morphosyntactic variation in Spain Maria Jose Serrano, University de La Laguna III. Language, the individual, and the society 10. Aging, Age, and Sociolinguistics Richard Cameron, University of Illinois, Chicago 11. Gender and variation: Word-final /s/ in men's and women's speech in Puerto Rico's western highlands Jonathan Holmquist, Temple University 12. Forms of address: The effect of the context Diane Uber, College of Wooster 13. Becoming a member of the speech community: Learning Socio-Phonetic Variation in child language Manuel Diaz-Campos, Indiana University 14. The relationship between historical linguistics and sociolinguistics Donald N. Tuten, Emory University, And Fernando Tejedo-Herrero, University Of Virginia 15. The acquisition of variation in second language Spanish: How to identify and catch a moving target Kimberly Geeslin, Indiana University IV. Spanish in contact 16. Spanish in contact with Quechua Ana Maria Escobar, University of Illinois 17. Spanish in contact with Guarani Shawn Gynan, Western Washington University 18. Spanish in Contact with Catalan Jose Luis Blas Arroyo, Universitat Jaume I 19. Spanish in contact with Portuguese: the case of Barranquenho J. Clancy Clements, Indiana University, Patrícia Amaral, Stanford University & Ana R. Luís, Universidade de Coimbra 20. Spanish in contact with Haitian Creole Luis A. Ortiz-Lopez, Universidad de Puerto Rico 21. Palenque (Colombia):multilingualism in an extraordinary social and historical context Armin Schwegler, University of California 22. Spanish in contact with Arabic Lofti Sayahi, The University at Albany V. Spanish in the USA, heritage language, L2 Spanish 23. Spanish in the US: Bilingual Discourse Markers Lourdes Torres, DePaul University 24. Functional adaptation and conceptual convergence in the analysis of language contact in the Spanish of bilingual communities in New York Ricardo Otheguy, City University of New York 25. Code-switching among US Latinos Almeida Jacqueline Toribio, P

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