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  2. Language contact - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_contact

    The influence can go deeper, extending to the exchange of even basic characteristics of a language such as morphology and grammar.. Newar, for example, spoken in Nepal, is a Sino-Tibetan language distantly related to Chinese but has had so many centuries of contact with neighbouring Indo-Iranian languages that it has even developed noun inflection, a trait that is typical of the Indo-European ...

  3. Inland Northern American English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inland_Northern_American...

    Inland Northern (American) English, [1] also known in American linguistics as the Inland North or Great Lakes dialect, [2] is an American English dialect spoken primarily by White Americans throughout much of the U.S. Great Lakes region.

  4. Dialect levelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialect_levelling

    Dialect levelling (or leveling in American English) is an overall reduction in the variation or diversity of a dialect's features when in contact with one or more other dialects. [1] This can come about through assimilation , mixture, and merging of certain dialects , often amidst a process of language codification , which can be a precursor to ...

  5. Explaining Hollywood: How to get a job as a dialect coach

    www.aol.com/news/explaining-hollywood-job...

    The pool of dialect coaches has always been small, and for decades many have been managed by Diane Kamp, who pioneered the concept of representing dialect coaches in the 1980s.

  6. Language Contact and the Origins of the Germanic Languages

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_Contact_and_the...

    Since Saami is known to have borrowed many words from a language now lost as Saami culture spread northwards into Scandinavia, Schrijver argues that Saami, West Germanic and North Germanic were all affected in similar ways by contact with a language or group of languages which 'shared a peculiar vowel system, whose features were impressed on ...

  7. Dialect continuum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialect_continuum

    A dialect continuum or dialect chain is a series of language varieties spoken across some ... but even here there has been considerable convergence in contact ...

  8. Dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialect

    In the Language Survey Reference Guide issued by SIL International, who produce Ethnologue, a dialect cluster is defined as a central variety together with a collection of varieties whose speakers can understand the central variety at a specified threshold level (usually between 70% and 85%) or higher. It is not required that peripheral ...

  9. Stratum (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratum_(linguistics)

    In linguistics, a stratum (Latin for 'layer') or strate is a historical layer of language that influences or is influenced by another language through contact.The notion of "strata" was first developed by the Italian linguist Graziadio Isaia Ascoli (1829–1907), and became known in the English-speaking world through the work of two different authors in 1932.