00893cam2 22002651 450 SOBE0008038620240516151745.0329600122020240516d1994 |||||ita|0103 bagerNL21Johann Gottfried HerderHildesheimOlms-Weidmann1994XXV, 344 p.20 cm001E6002000292972001 Sämtliche Werke / Johann Gottfried Herder ; herausgegeben von Bernhard Suphan21Herder, Johann Gottfried : vonSOBA00011046070554347ITUNISOB20240516RICAUNISOBUNISOB10084509SOBE00080386M 102 Monografia moderna SBNW100002871-21SI84509acquistoNmenleUNISOBUNISOB20240516151224.020240516151745.0menle214165117UNISOB05736nam 2200745 a 450 991096688340332120240516222853.097866138613999781283548946128354894197890272729429027272948(CKB)2560000000091085(EBL)997712(OCoLC)808670842(SSID)ssj0000701168(PQKBManifestationID)11399973(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000701168(PQKBWorkID)10670663(PQKB)10599517(MiAaPQ)EBC997712(Au-PeEL)EBL997712(CaPaEBR)ebr10593819(DE-B1597)720325(DE-B1597)9789027272942(EXLCZ)99256000000009108520050602d2005 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrDublin English evolution and change /Raymond Hickey1st ed.Amsterdam ;Philadelphia J. Benjamins Pub. Co.20051 online resource (280 p.)Varieties of English around the world. General series,0172-7362 ;v. G35Description based upon print version of record.9789027248954 9027248958 Includes bibliographical references (p. [243]-260) and index.Dublin English Evolution and change; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; Preface; I Investigating Dublin English; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Matters of terminology; 1.2 The city of Dublin; 1.3 Classifying Dublin English; 2 Collecting data; The observations concerning vowel shifts in Dublin; 2.2 Initial methods used; 2.3 Conducting the interviews; 2.4 Results of the data collection; 2.5 Data and figures; 2.6 Increasing the data base; 2.7 Aim of the recordings; 2.8 Organisation of the recordings; 2.9 Obtaining recordings for Dublin English2.10 Sample sentences with lexical sets 2.11 Free text; 2.12 Word list; II English in present-day Dublin; 1 Introduction; 1.1 How can one tell a moderate Dublin accent?; 1.2 The status of Received Pronunciation; 1.3 The local Dublin speech community; 1.4 Features of local Dublin accents; 1.5 Additional data for local Dublin English; 1.6 Markers of local Dublin English; 2 Recent changes in Dublin English; 2.1 Before and after the changes; 2.2 In the beginning was Dublin 4; 2.3 Why 'Dortspeak' failed; 2.4 Demotic developments: the 1990's vowel shift; 2.5 Details of the vowel shift2.6 Arguments for and against the shift 2.7 Phonological interpretation; 2.8 Participants in the vowel shift; 2.9 Propagation of sound change; 2.10 More on dissociation; 2.11 The New Pronunciation; 2.12 Irish, British and American English; 2.13 Uncontentious features in Dublin English; 2.14 The spread of new Dublin English; 2.15 The gender issue; 3 Attitudes to Dublin English; 3.1 Assessment of speaker accents; 3.2 Assessment results; 3.3 Perception of dialect regions; 3.4 Results of dialect divisions; 3.5 Evaluation of dialect regions; 4 The wider context; 4.1 English in Belfast4.2 English in Derry 4.3 Dublin and northern cities; 4.4 Dublin and London; 4.5 New towns and new suburbs; 4.6 Non-native Dublin English; 5 The grammar of Dublin English; 5.1 Morphology; 5.2 Syntax; 5.3 A Survey of Irish English Usage; 6 The vocabulary of Dublin English; 6.1 Studies of the Irish English lexicon; 6.2 Treatment of English lexis; 6.3 Productive morphology; 6.4 Vernacularity in Dublin English; 6.5 Loanwords from Irish; 6.6 Phrases and expressions; 7 Place names in Dublin; III Reaching back in time; 1 The history of English in Ireland; 1.1 The coming of the English1.2 Spread of English 1.3 The situation in medieval Ireland; 1.4 Renewed dominance of English; 1.5 The eighteenth century; 1.6 The nineteenth century; 2 Letters as linguistic evidence; 2.1 18th century letters; 2.1.1 The Mahon letters; 2.2 19th century letters; 2.2.1 The Owens Letters; 3 Literary texts as linguistic evidence; 3.1 The plays of Dion Boucicault; 3.2 The plays of Sean O 'Casey; 4 Prescriptive comments by Dublin authors; 4.1 Thomas Sheridan; 4.1.1 Sheridan's system of pronunciation; 4.1.2 Non-standard vowel values; 4.1.3 Conditioned realisations; 4.1.4 Word stress; 4.1.5 Summary4.2 Swift and Irish EnglishThe present book describes the English language in all its facets as spoken in present-day Dublin, the capital of the Republic of Ireland. It covers the entire range of its history since the first arrival of English there several hundred years ago. Apart from the evolution of English in the capital, the book also concentrates on the significant changes which have been taking place in the speech of Dublin in the past 15 years or so. The rapid change of Dublin English is seen as a correlate to the many social and economic developments which have occurred in recent years. The type of linguisticVarieties of English around the world.General series ;v. 35.English languageIrelandDublinEnglish languageDialectsIrelandDublinEnglish languageVariationIrelandDublinDublin (Ireland)LanguagesEnglish languageEnglish languageDialectsEnglish languageVariation427/.941835Hickey Raymond1954-176031MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910966883403321Dublin English1099197UNINA07465nam 22007455 450 991103162740332120251010131543.03-031-90050-210.1007/978-3-031-90050-1(MiAaPQ)EBC32340629(Au-PeEL)EBL32340629(CKB)41603694400041(DE-He213)978-3-031-90050-1(EXLCZ)994160369440004120251010d2025 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierConstraints and Adaptations to Global Change at the Land-Sea Interface: For a Shared Ecological and Energy Transition Proceedings of the 19th French—Japanese Oceanography Symposium /edited by Anne-Claire Bennis, Jean-Claude Dauvin, Eric Feunteun, Teruhisa Komatsu, Osamu Matsuda, Patrick Prouzet1st ed. 2025.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Springer,2025.1 online resource (514 pages)Earth and Environmental Science Series3-031-90049-9 Part 1 - Vulnerability and Resilience of Coastal Ecosystems to Global Change -- Exploring extreme wave propagation in coastal zones: A combined physical and numerical modeling study -- Spatial and temporal monitoring of a dune system evolution using drone-based lasergrammetry: the case study of Anse Du Guesclin (Brittany) -- Monitoring the submersion using monthly time-series at high spatial resolution: PlanetScope’s five-year-old Beaussais’ marsh restoration -- Spatial variation of sea-air CO fluxes in the Seto Inland Sea and analysis of contributed parameters -- Multidisciplinary study of the population dynamics of the Non-Indigenous Manila Clam Ruditapes philippinarum along the western coast of Cotentin, France -- Spatio-temporal distribution of intertidal shrimps, P. serratus and P. elegans from two western and eastern Cotentin sites (Normandy, France) -- Current Status, Causes and Countermeasures for the Change from Seaweed Beds to Barren Grounds in Japan Based on the Reports of the Project Promoting the Multifunctional Roles of Fisheries -- Resilience of marine benthic communities in an area highly impacted by human activities: the case of the English Channel -- The Eel Paradox. Holistic management of migratory fishes. Impossible mission ? -- Innovations in Coastal management from unconventional origins: In the pursuit of exploring and managing coastal zones, unconventional approaches and methodologies can act as catalysts for fostering research and innovation. -- Part 2 - Development of Marine Renewable Energies and impact on Socio-Ecosystems -- Variation of fish communities on two artificial structures along the French Atlantic coast -- Methods for modeling marine food webs and studying the cumulative impact of climate change and offshore wind turbines on ecosystem functioning -- Field data acquisition strategy for an ecosystem approach to studying the reef and reserved effects of offshore wind farms: the Fécamp measuring mast -- Co-Existence Between Offshore Wind Farm and Fisheries: Experiences in Japan -- Co-existence of offshore wind and other users of the sea: years of learning what to do (and not do!) -- Contributing to scientific knowledge in the context of industrial project: the GIS Eolien en Mer -- The Scientific Interest Group ECUME: a multidisciplinary consortium challenging to assess cumulated impacts of human activities in the eastern part of the English Channel -- Part 3 - The Satoumi Concept and the Management of Commons: An Integrated Approach, a link between Land and Sea, between Nature and Culture. -- SDG as a local integrated management tool -- Concept of Satoumi and its related activities in coastal areas of Japan -- Coral Reef Satoumi in Okinawa, Japan -- Restoring the European eel (Anguilla anguilla) and its habitats in France: a social, economic and environmental dynamic similar to the Sato-umi concept -- Positive effects of seagrass beds on sanitary conditions in oyster aquaculture -- Junior and senior high school students' challenge to solve the problem of marine garbage in the Seto Inland Sea -Through the practice of citizen collaboration through “Civic Tech”- -- “Satoumi” created by eelgrass beds and oyster farming, Hinase Town, the Seto Inland Sea, Japan -- The culture’s interface between human’s economy and ecosphere’s integrity - The EcoSensible Sphere, a new concept to study an art-mediated salt marsh restoration -- History and prospects of French-Japanese collaboration and friendship in oyster farming.Coastal or semi-enclosed seas, coastal or interface zones between land and sea are areas widely coveted by numerous human activities. These activities do not assess the effects and impacts of their cumulative pressures on the natural environment: coastal development, tourism, terrestrial pollution, maritime transport, dredging and piling, extraction of marine aggregates and development or planned development of marine wind farms or tidal turbines. In this context and despite the high productivity of these ecosystems, fishing and shellfish farming, which also exert their own environmental pressures, have some difficulties in ensuring their sustainability in an increasingly man-made environment and generating increasingly exacerbated conflicts of use. The symposium will address some aspects of resilience (via their capacity to adapt to global change) of these coastal ecosystems and adaptation of human communities to climate change in a context of full use of natural resources. A more holistic approach to the impact of all uses on the environment to ensure a more optimal management of the Commons, needs to be implemented. In Japan, the concept of Sato-umi (harmony between the coastal sea and local communities) is being implemented and incorporates participatory science and active restoration projects in an integrated coastal zone management framework.Earth and Environmental Science SeriesEcologyClimatologyEnergy policyEnergy policyEnvironmental sciencesSocial aspectsBiologyEnvironmental SciencesClimate SciencesEnergy Policy, Economics and ManagementEnvironmental Social SciencesBiological SciencesEcology.Climatology.Energy policy.Energy policy.Environmental sciencesSocial aspects.Biology.Environmental Sciences.Climate Sciences.Energy Policy, Economics and Management.Environmental Social Sciences.Biological Sciences.333.7Bennis Anne-Claire1851178Dauvin Jean-Claude1292499Feunteun Eric1851179Komatsu Teruhisa1851180Matsuda Osamu652447Prouzet Patrick1851181MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911031627403321Constraints and Adaptations to Global Change at the Land-Sea Interface: For a Shared Ecological and Energy Transition4451518UNINA