Linguistic varieties in Northern England and Scotland have always been closely related, as a result of their shared history and geographical proximity. Older Scots and Northern Middle English were divided from other Middle English dialects by a major dialect boundary, and this division survived into modern times, separating Scots and far Northern English dialects on the one hand from Southern and Midland English dialects on the other. Cutting across this dialect unity, the Scottish-English Border has further shaped the relationship between linguistic varieties on either side of it. This has caused dialects in Northern England and Scotland to look in different directions and, as traditional dialect boundaries have faded, the Scottish-English Border appears to have become increasingly important as a linguistic divide. Thus we cannot begin to understand the meaning of ‘Northern English’ without considering the relationship between linguistic varieties in Scotland and Northern England, and the extent to which the Scottish-English Border constitutes a linguistic boundary between them.
Maguire, Warren, Rhona Alcorn, Benjamin Molineaux, Joanna Kopaczyk, Vasilios Karaiskos & Bettelou Los
2019. Charting the rise and demise of a phonotactically motivated change in Scots. Folia Linguistica 53:s40-s1 ► pp. 37 ff.
Niehaus, Konstantin
2019. Beal Joan C. and Sylvie Hancil:Perspectives on Northern Englishes(Topics in English Linguistics 96). Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics 5:2
Llamas, Carmen, Dominic Watt & Andrew E. MacFarlane
2016. Estimating the Relative Sociolinguistic Salience of Segmental Variables in a Dialect Boundary Zone. Frontiers in Psychology 7
MAGUIRE, WARREN
2016. Pre-R Dentalisation in Scotland. English Language and Linguistics 20:2 ► pp. 315 ff.
Maguire, Warren
2018. The Origins of Epenthesis in Liquid+Sonorant Clusters in Mid‐Ulster English. Transactions of the Philological Society 116:3 ► pp. 484 ff.
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