In this article, I conduct a quantitative analysis of do absence in negative declaratives in the present tense in a dialect from the north-east of Scotland, Buckie. Analysis of nearly 800 contexts of use reveals that this variation is entirely conditioned by linguistic internal constraints. The most significant of these is person and number of the subject — 3rd person singular subjects and plural NPs have no do absence, while do is variable in the remaining pronouns. I argue that a syntactic explanation best accounts for this patterning of use. Where there is no overt -s inflection in the present tense (influenced by the “northern subject rule”), do is not obligatory in Buckie Scots. Frequency effects, lexical restrictions and processing constraints are called upon to account for the range of frequencies of do absence seen in the variable contexts. Lastly, there is no significant change in use of do across three generations of speakers, highlighting the community members’ relative immunity to prescriptive norms.
2018. Dressing down up north: DRESS-lowering and /l/ allophony in a Scottish dialect. Language Variation and Change 30:1 ► pp. 23 ff.
SMITH, JENNIFER & SOPHIE HOLMES-ELLIOTT
2018. The unstoppable glottal: tracking rapid change in an iconic British variable. English Language and Linguistics 22:3 ► pp. 323 ff.
Childs, Claire
2017. Integrating syntactic theory and variationist analysis: The structure of negative indefinites in regional dialects of British English. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 2:1
2014. Syntactic Variation: Evidence from the Scottish Corpus of Text and Speech. In Sociolinguistics in Scotland, ► pp. 258 ff.
Smith, Jennifer & Mercedes Durham
2011. A tipping point in dialect obsolescence? Change across the generations in Lerwick, Shetland1. Journal of Sociolinguistics 15:2 ► pp. 197 ff.
Smith, Jennifer & Mercedes Durham
2019. Sociolinguistic Variation in Children's Language,
Aaron, Jessi Elana
2010. Pushing the envelope: Looking beyond the variable context. Language Variation and Change 22:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Rowe, Charley
2007. He divn’t gan tiv a college ti di that, man! A study of do (and to) in Tyneside English. Language Sciences 29:2-3 ► pp. 360 ff.
Smith, Jennifer, Mercedes Durham & Liane Fortune
2007. “Mam, my trousers is fa'in doon!”: Community, caregiver, and child in the acquisition of variation in a Scottish dialect. Language Variation and Change 19:01
Smith, Jennifer, Mercedes Durham & Liane Fortune
2009. Universal and dialect-specific pathways of acquisition: Caregivers, children, and t/d deletion. Language Variation and Change 21:1 ► pp. 69 ff.
Walker, James A.
2005. The ain't constraint: Not-contraction in early African American English. Language Variation and Change 17:01
[no author supplied]
2005. References. In Clinical Sociolinguistics, ► pp. 281 ff.
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