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Pronouncing French names in New Orleans

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2009

George Wolf
Affiliation:
Department Of Foreign Languages, University of New OrleansNew Orleans, LA 70148
Michèle Bocquillon
Affiliation:
Department Of Foreign Languages, University of New OrleansNew Orleans, LA 70148
Debbie de la Houssaye
Affiliation:
Department Of Foreign Languages, University of New OrleansNew Orleans, LA 70148
Phyllis Krzyzek
Affiliation:
Department Of Foreign Languages, University of New OrleansNew Orleans, LA 70148
Clifton Meynard
Affiliation:
Department Of Foreign Languages, University of New OrleansNew Orleans, LA 70148
Lisbeth Philip
Affiliation:
Department Of Foreign Languages, University of New OrleansNew Orleans, LA 70148

Abstract

This article, based on 984 interviews with bearers of French names in the city of New Orleans, investigates the use of the notion of pronunciation as a device by which speakers manage their talk. The investigation proceeded primarily by eliciting ways in which people employ devices for talking about talk in everyday communicative interactions, as a means to manage various types of communicational phenomena and to deal with communication difficulties emerging from a clash of phonetic traditions. The result is a definition of pronunciation in terms which are used by a majority of speakers. An appendix gives a list of names, with comments by their bearers concerning ways in which those bearers would attempt to convey to mispronouncers the correct pronunciation of their names. (Pronunciation, lay metalanguage, folk-linguistics, phonology, phonetics, New Orleans, French names)

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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References

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