Groovy!
I'll see what I can do to help tonight.
Groovy!
I'll see what I can do to help tonight.
Yep, there's nothing wrong about change... Of the four seasons, none lasts forever... and the moon waxes & wanes... [Sun Tzu]. There's a nice book out there, by the way it's called Language change: Progress or decay? by Jean Aitchison very readable, very interesting, highly recommended...
As for the split personalities I'm not sure, but I gather the naughty one would display more variability and innovation
Thanks heaps! Looking forward to it...
To pay me back I hope you at least investigate the idea of buying a motorbike.![]()
haha... yeah, sure! I mean, I AM kinda into motorbikes – I've already got the attire (a traditional leather jacket & boots) due to my heavy metal pastand so after finishing with this project (and providing my financial income increases) I'll seriously consider buying a bike... The only problem is that a biker somehow doesn't fit into the landscape of my town too well; I envy you guys your beautiful surroundings (and much better roads, I reckon)
![]()
Bah, bikers never fit in anywhere!
A few suggestions... see if you can use an alternate file type for the bits that we have to read as not everyone has microsoft word in order to read the .doc files.
rtf or txt and everyone can read it without installing anything.
I'm just installing word now and then I'll record.
Also, heavy metal "Fashion leather" might not protect you that well in a crash.Our roads are definitely twisty and interesting but not of the highest quality
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Alright I've recorded, heres a link:
http://www.9thrangers.com/Sam-Linguistic.zip
I didn't try to correct any of my speech just like you asked!
Have you received many other contributions?
OK... Following your suggestion, I've saved each file as rtf as well as pdf, so I suppose everyone will be able to read them now... Here's the updated package: http://rapidshare.com/files/17145181...t-package2.zip
THANK YOU! That's a job well done, indeed
As for the number... Well, around 20 people said they were going to do it, but I've received just 5 packages (mostly South African English), so I'm still waiting... My supervisor says I should have at least 30 people for the study to be treated seriously (and she's right obviously; in order to draw any conclusions about how people speak, one needs a bigger sample). So I hope those other people are simply busy, but are going to deliver their recordings some time soon... Perhaps this project is slightly too ambitious for an MA thesis, but I don't want to give up just now, I still have some time...
My colleague's got a greater challenge – she's writing about speech processes in bilingual kids, and she wants to study an English-Polish (or Polish-English) bilingual child... That's a huge problem because firstly, she needs to find such a child (and it should be preferably something like 6-months old), and then she has to ask its parents for permission to study the child.
And she actually had everything done (!), but one day, the child's mother came from work and found my colleague (and I must say she's a good-looking girl) chatting with the dad about the child... Everything was absolutely normal, but the mother had interpreted their smiles and the whole situation as an affair of some sort! She asked my colleague to leave and never approach her family again, or else...
As a result, the girl didn't manage to finish her work, and what's more - she cannot use those recordings because she hasn't got the parents' consent anymore... She has to start all over again :/
Hahaha gutted!
Women eh.![]()
I'd help but my accent's all over the place.
Growing up in Australia, I was mocked by my peers because of my "English" accent - thanks to my British parents. Of course, they thought that I sounded 'Strine...
Now living here, most Kiwis peg me as an Aussie but foreigners sometimes ask if I'm English and now of course my Aussie family reckon I sound like a Kiwi.
I can't win![]()
."No Matter what you do there will be critics."
Apathy - I could take it or leave it...
Exactly
I think you could still help. I'm investigating just a few tiny features of southern-hemisphere accents (which my texts are supposed to elicit), and if your speech had them as well, that would certainly mean something. Your linguistic background would be taken into consideration, and besides – English English has more in common with Aussie or Kiwi pronunciation than, say with Northern American English. It could work in my opinion, so if you have some free time, you can have a go at the texts.
Perhaps there's someone around ya who could do it too?
Cheers
EDIT: I've just received your e-mail! That was quickThank you!!!
Grendel. I've emailed you my attempt, lemme know if it works. Have a go peeps, it's kinda funny listening to your own muppet voice
http://picasaweb.google.com/kezzafish
My pics of some trail rides and events in the lower north islandAnd check out our commercial Photography site for any other photographic needs
http://www.fishpattie.com
Thanks for the input! Works very well...
And I 'd like to say one more thing. I don't want to disclose the features that I'm seeking in these accents just now, but I do want to say something about the research at this point.
The MA thesis can go two ways: 1) I observe a feature, I create hypotheses about it, or certain assumptions and then the results confirm the assumptions, or... 2) I assume something, but then the results are contradictory and indicate that I was totally wrong... Either way it's all good! What's more, those contradictory results are often more interesting.
So what I'm trying to say is that even if I don't find too many instances of the features I want to observe in your speech, it will still be OK and I'll most likely pass the exam; it'll just show that there is some kind of a change on the horizon, but it's progressing slowly and it's too early to make new generalizations about a given variety.
And there's another good thing about the whole project, even if it fails to prove my assumptions it provides modern descriptions of the discussed dialects. It can confirm what has been written in similar publications or show that they are wrong here and there due to language change. Hence, it will be extremely valuable for other researchers and will provide a point of reference for them. Aussie-Kiwi-South African English from 2008/09, supported by recordings there are a lot of linguists out there who'd like to read such a work.
To conclude, try to be as natural as you can and don't worry if you think you pronounce something which contrasts with my hopes. Nothing like that is going to happenThere are linguists who, in a way, fabricate their results and force people to say things they would normally never (or rarely) produce. I'm not one of them, I'm interested in real language, language that is used by real people. Real language is not perfect, just as we ourselves are not perfect, and nothing we create will ever be perfect. There will always be exceptions to the rules...
Alright, enough of my monologues :P
I'm with you there, grendel. I'm fascinated by 'descriptive' linguistics and rather annoyed by the 'prescriptive' approach - the one that tries to tell us we're wrong if we pronounce something in a way that the listener doesn't approve of. [And I positively endorse ending sentences with prepositions.]
A good Kiwi accent is nothing to be ashamed of (or proud of for that matter). It just is what it is. There is no reason that we should sound like people in any other part of the world.
Sorry I can't help you with your research (no microphone) but I wish you the best of luck!![]()
There is no such thing as bad weather; only inappropriate clothing!
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