Book review
Philip Robinson. Ulster-Scots: A Grammar of the Traditional Written and Spoken Language Belfast: Ulster-Scots Heritage Council/Ullans Press, 1997. x + 229 pp. £10.50 (pb).
References
Fenton, James
1995 The Hamely Tongue. Newtownards: Ulster Scots Academic Press.
Grant, William and James M. Dixon
1921 Manual of Modern Scots. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Harris, John
1993 “
The grammar of Irish English”. In
James Milroy and
Lesley Milroy, eds.
Real English: The Grammar of English Dialects in the British Isles. London: Longman, 139–86.
Hewitt, John
ed. 1974 Rhyming Weavers and Other Country Poets of Antrim and Down. Belfast: Blackstaff Press.
Kingsmore, Rona K.
1995 Ulster Scots Speech: A Sociolinguistic Study. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.
Kirk, John M.
fc. “
Ulster Scots: Realities and myths”.
Ulster Folklife.
Montgomery, Michael
1997 “
The Scotch-Irish element in Appalachian English: How broad? How deep?”. In
H. Tyler Bletheir and
Curtis W. Wood, eds.
Ulster and North America. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 189–212.
Montgomery, Michael and Robert J. Gregg
1997 “
The Scots language in Ulster”. In
Charles Jones, ed.
The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 569–622.
Ó Baoill, Dónall P.
1990 “
Language contact in Ireland: The Irish phonological substratum in Irish English”. In
Jerold A. Edmondson,
Crawford Feagin and
Peter Mühlhäusler, eds.
Development and Diversity: Language Variation Across Time and Space. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics, 147–72.
Robinson, Philip
1998 Wake the Tribe O’ Dan. Belfast: Ullans Press.
Todd, Loreto
1989 The Language of Irish Literature. London: Macmillan.
Visser, F. Th.
1969 An Historical Syntax of the English Language. Part 31, first half. Leiden: Brill.
Wolfram, Walt and Natalie Schilling-Estes
1997 Hoi Toide on the Outer Banks: The Story of the Ocracoke Brogue. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
Cited by
Cited by 1 other publications
McCafferty, Kevin
2003.
The Northern Subject Rule in Ulster: How Scots, how English?.
Language Variation and Change 15:01
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 27 february 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.