
Contents
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18.1 Introduction 18.1 Introduction
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18.2 The development of Cork City 18.2 The development of Cork City
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18.3 Cork’s linguistic past and present 18.3 Cork’s linguistic past and present
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18.4 Cork’s place among the dialects of Irish English 18.4 Cork’s place among the dialects of Irish English
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18.4.1 Cork City English to date 18.4.1 Cork City English to date
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18.5 New data for Cork English 18.5 New data for Cork English
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18.6 Conclusions 18.6 Conclusions
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18.6.1 Further research 18.6.1 Further research
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References References
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18 Irish English in Cork City
Get accessNicola J. Bessell is Lecturer in the Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences, University College Cork. After gaining her PhD from the University of British Columbia, Canada, she taught and held a research position at the University of Pennsylvania, followed by a faculty position in the Linguistics Department at the University of Texas at Austin. She held a visiting teaching position at the University of California Santa Barbara, and now teaches at UCC in Ireland. She has collected data and published on several indigenous languages of the Pacific Northwest Coast, and now works on clinical data, database development, and variation in Irish English.
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Published:18 December 2023
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Abstract
Cork City is Ireland’s second-largest city, with a metropolitan population approaching 418,000 (2016 census). As with many other Irish cities and towns, Cork City has a varied history of settlement and language use, with multilingual influences dating from the period of monastic settlement. Visitors to the modern city will hear many different ways of speaking. Some differences are associated with specific parts of the city or are rooted in conservative regional patterns. Others reflect recent supraregional norms and, increasingly, recent international immigration. As with any linguistic community, most speakers command a range of registers and vary their speech according to context and their own sense of identity. This chapter situates Cork City English in the context of Irish English studies, and brings our understanding of some of the city’s linguistic characteristics up to date by presenting newly collected data from families based in different parts of the city.
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