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The German Language in Switzerland

Multilingualism, Diglossia and Variation

by Felicity Rash (Author)
©1998 Monographs 324 Pages

Summary

This book offers a broad survey of issues relating to the German language in Switzerland. The initial focus is on the German-speaking community's relationship with the French, Italian and Romansh language communities. Consideration is then given to the complex issue of diglossia within the germanophone Swiss community, and the maintenance of both the Swiss German dialects and the Swiss German standard language as co-existent codes of equal status. The Swiss German dialects, the Swiss variety of standard German, and the influence of various foreign languages on both of these language forms are described in some detail. Finally, sociolinguistic issues affecting the German language in Switzerland are considered: the connection between social variation and linguistic change; language variation stemming from differences of age, sex and ethnic origin; and linguistic behaviour and phatic communication.

Details

Pages
324
Year
1998
ISBN (Softcover)
9783906757681
Language
English
Keywords
Swiss German dialect Multilingualism Regional variation Sociolinguistics Diglossia
Published
Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., New York, Paris, Wien, 1998. 324 pp.

Biographical notes

Felicity Rash (Author)

The Author: Dr. Felicity Rash is a Lecturer in German at Queen Mary and Westfield College (University of London). Her published work includes her doctoral thesis, French and Italian lexical influences in German-speaking Switzerland (1550-1650), and articles on German sociolinguistics and German-Swiss literature.

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Title: The German Language in Switzerland