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E-book
Author Lange, Claudia

Title The syntax of spoken Indian English / by Claudia Lange
Published Philadelphia : John Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012

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Description 1 online resource (xii, 265 pages)
Series Varieties of English Around the World
Varieties of English Around the World
Contents The Syntax of Spoken Indian English; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; List of figures and tables; List of abbreviations; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1. Introduction; 1.1 English in India or Indian English?; 1.2 Aims and scope of this study; 1.3 Structure; Chapter 2. Conceptual background; 2.1 New Englishes and outer circles; 2.1.1 Ideology and terminology: From English to Englishes; 2.1.2 The legacy of Braj Kachru; 2.1.3 "The Kachru catch"; 2.1.4 The Dynamic Model; 2.1.5 Outlook; 2.2 The native speaker: An elusive concept
2.2.1 The native speaker and the discourse of hegemony2.2.2 The native speaker and linguistic variation; 2.2.3 Outlook; 2.3 Contact-induced language change; 2.3.1 Introduction; 2.3.2 Mechanisms of contact-induced language change; 2.4 Norms and standards; 2.4.1 Norms and the (post)colonial speech community; 2.4.2 Spoken and written standards; Chapter 3. Multilingualism in India; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Typological survey; 3.2.1 Patterns of multilingualism; 3.2.2 South Asia as a sprachbund; 3.2.3 South Asia as a discourse area; 3.2.4 South Asia as a sociolinguistic area
3.3 English as an Indian language3.3.1 Introduction; 3.3.2 The Indian communicative space; 3.3.3 Outlook; Chapter 4. The syntax of spoken Indian English; 4.1 Introduction; 4.1.1 Corpus-based approaches to IndE; 4.1.2 ICE and ICE-India; 4.1.3 The speakers; 4.1.4 The data; 4.1.5 Discourse-pragmatic sentence structure; 4.2 Non-initial existential there; 4.2.1 Definition; 4.2.2 Existentials: Corpus evidence; 4.2.3 Non-initial existential there in ICE-India; 4.2.4 The canonical existential in ICE-India; 4.2.5 Initial and non-initial existential constructions in spoken IndE: Speaker variables
4.2.6 Explanatory parameters4.3 Topicalization; 4.3.1 Definition; 4.3.2 Topicalization in ICE-India and ICE-GB: Form and frequency; 4.3.3 Topicalization in ICE-India: Contexts and function; 4.3.4 Preposing of non-arguments; 4.3.5 Unlinked topic constructions; 4.3.6 Explanatory parameters; 4.4 Dislocation; 4.4.1 Definition; 4.4.2 Left dislocation: Form and function; 4.4.3 Right dislocation: Form and function; 4.4.4 Dislocation: Corpus evidence; 4.4.5 Explanatory parameters; 4.5 Cleft constructions; 4.5.1 Definition; 4.5.2 Clefts in ICE-GB; 4.5.3 Clefts in ICE-India
4.5.4 Explanatory parameters4.6 Utterance modifiers; 4.6.1 Focus markers: Only and itself; 4.6.2 Invariant tags; Chapter 5. Conclusion; 5.1 Indian English as a contact language; 5.2 Multilingual competence: The norms of spoken Indian English; 5.3 From norms to standards: Indian English in the 21st century; References; Author index; Language index; Subject index
Summary This book offers an in-depth analysis of several features of spoken Indian English that are generally considered as 'typical', but have never before been studied empirically. Drawing on authentic spoken data from the International Corpus of English, Indian component, the book focuses on the domain of discourse organization and examines the form, function and distribution of invariant tags such as isn't it and no/na, non-initial existential there, focus markers only and itself, topicalization and left-dislocation. By focusing on multilingual speakers' i
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject English language -- Spoken English -- India
English language -- India -- Syntax
Languages in contact -- India
Interference (Linguistics)
Sociolinguistics -- India
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES -- General.
English language -- Spoken English
English language -- Syntax
Interference (Linguistics)
Languages in contact
Sociolinguistics
India
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9789027273093
902727309X
1283894904
9781283894906
9027249059
9789027249050