Network by dialect

From Dialectsyntax
Revision as of 12:08, 31 October 2011 by Franca (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

This page gives an overview of the dialects and the dialect syntacticians associated with them.

Contents

Afrikaans

Basque dialects

Breton dialects

  • Mélanie Jouitteau at CNRS, France. The wikipedia site that she has created for her project, ARBRES, can be found here.

Catalan dialects

Danish dialects


Dutch dialects

(West-)Flemish:

English dialects

In general:

Appalachian English:

Bradford English:

</blockquote>
Hiberno-English:
Scottish English:

Faroese dialects

Finnish dialects

Franco-Provençal dialects

Frisian dialects

Gaelic dialects

Scottish Gaelic:

German dialects

In general:

Alemannic:

Austrian German:

Bavarian:

Swiss German:

Tyrolean:

Greek dialects

In general:

Asia Minor dialects:

        •    Angela Ralli at University of Patras

Cappadocian dialect:

        •    Mark Janse at the University of Gent, Dimitris Papazacharidou
              at University of Patras

Cretan dialect:

        •    Ioanna Kappa at University of Crete

Cypriot Greek:

        •   Stravroula Tsiplakou, Yoryia Agouraki, Phoevos Panagiotidis,
            Kleanthes Grohmann at University of Cyprus

Grico dialect (spoken in Italy):

        •    Angela Ralli, Argyris Archakis, Dimitris Papazachariou at
              University of Patras

Pontic Greek:

        •    Ioanna Sitaridou at University of Cambridge

Icelandic dialects

Italian dialects

In general:

Northern Italian dialects:

Southern Italian dialects:

  • Michela Cennamo at University of Napels Federico II
  • Angela Ralli and her group at Univesity of Patras (Greek-based, Grico dialect)

Macedonian dialects

  • Olga Tomic at University of Skopje/University of Novi Sad

Malagasy dialects

Norwegian dialects

Occitan dialects

Portuguese dialects

Sámi dialects

Spanish dialects

Swedish dialects

In general:

Finnish Swedish:

Welsh dialects

  • David Willis (University of Cambridge), Maggie Tallerman (University of Newcastle) and Bob Borsley (University of Essex) have recently launched the Syntactic Atlas of Welsh Dialects. This is a project aimed at establishing the extent of variation in the syntax of present-day Welsh, including age-related variation and variation due to linguistic background, as well as geogrpahical variation.
======
Personal tools