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West Midlands English: Birmingham and the Black Country
Urszula Clark, Esther Asprey
School of Social Sciences and Humanities
Aston Centre for Applied Linguistics (ACAL)
Research output
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Book/Report
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Dive into the research topics of 'West Midlands English: Birmingham and the Black Country'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Arts and Humanities
Birmingham
100%
linguistic varieties
100%
Similarities
50%
Linguistics
50%
Commonwealth
50%
Linguistic features
50%
Native Speaker
50%
Grammatical Structure
50%
Linguistic change
50%
Revolutions
50%
Neighbors
50%
Post-War
50%
Phonological
50%
Morphology
50%
Stigma
50%
heartland
50%
English dialects
50%
Industrial Heritage
50%
Lexical Structure
50%
British Isle
50%
Keyphrases
West Midlands
100%
Birmingham
100%
Black Country
100%
Linguistic Variation
66%
Social Factors
33%
Linguistic Features
33%
Tight
33%
Native Speaker
33%
Grammatical Structure
33%
Linguistic Change
33%
Industrial Revolution
33%
Historical Factors
33%
Dialects of English
33%
Phonological Structure
33%
EU Member States
33%
Linguistic Phenomena
33%
Morphological Construction
33%
Commonwealth Countries
33%
Immediate Neighbors
33%
Industrial Heritage
33%
Unusual Events
33%
Annotated Bibliography
33%
Lexical Structure
33%
Industrial Decline
33%
Social Mobility
33%
British Isles
33%
Social Sciences
UK
100%
Bibliographies
100%
Linguistic Feature
100%
EU Member State
100%
Industrialization
100%
Industrial Heritage
100%
Social Mobility
100%
Native Speaker
100%
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Commonwealth Countries
100%
Material Science
Morphology
100%