LANGUAGE CHANGE AND SOCIAL MOBILITY IN 19TH CENTURY BRITAIN
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speech forms, social structure, Received Pronunciation, the standardization of English, linguistic norms, social mobility.##article.abstract##
This article explores the relationship between language and social structures in 19th-century Britain. Focusing on the intersection of language change and the rise of the middle class, the book discusses how newly mobile social classes, including the working class and the bourgeoisie, adapted their speech to fit into emerging social contexts. The text also highlights the role of education, the rise of standardized English, and the social pressures that led to changes in both pronunciation and vocabulary during this period.
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REFERENCES
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2. Miller, James. Language and Society in 19th-Century England. Routledge, 2007.
3. Wells, John C. Accents of English: Volume 2: The British Isles. Cambridge University Press, 1982.
4. Harris, John. "Social Mobility and Language Change in 19th Century Britain." Historical Linguistics, vol. 25, no. 3, 2010.
5. Kerswill, Paul, and Ann Williams. Social Networks and Language Change: The Case of Dialect Levelling in Northern England. Oxford University Press, 2002.