Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Part of a Book (48)
- Article (22)
- Book (6)
- Conference Proceeding (3)
- Course Material (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (81)
Keywords
- Deutsch (34)
- Mundart (20)
- Sprachinsel (19)
- Mundart Russlanddeutsch (14)
- Aussiedler (13)
- Russland (13)
- Russlanddeutsche (12)
- Sowjetunion (12)
- Sprachvariante (12)
- Sprachkontakt (11)
Publicationstate
Reviewstate
- (Verlags)-Lektorat (8)
- Peer-Review (2)
- Verlags-Lektorat (1)
Publisher
- Lang (8)
- Omskij gosudarstvennyj pedagogičeskij institut imeni A. M. Gorkogo; Ministerstvo Prosveščenija RSFSR (7)
- Institut für Deutsche Sprache (4)
- Narr (4)
- OGPI (3)
- De Gruyter (2)
- Erich Schmidt Verlag (2)
- Harrassowitz (2)
- Ministerstvo Pros. RSFSR Omskij Gos. Ped. Inst. (2)
- Omskij gosudarstvennyj pedagogičeskij institut imeni A. M. Gorkogo (2)
The research project “German Today” aims to determine the amount of regional variation in (near-) standard German spoken by young and older educated adults, and to identify and locate the regional features. To this end, an extensive corpus of read and spontaneous speech is currently being compiled. German is a so-called pluricentric language. With our corpus we aim to determine whether national or regional standards really exist. Furthermore, the linguistic variation due to different contextual styles (read vs. spontaneous speech) shall be analysed. Finally, the corpus will enable us to investigate whether linguistic change has occurred in the domain of the German standard language. The main focus of all research questions is on phonetic variation (lexical variation is only of minor interest). Read and spontaneous speech of four secondary school students (aged seventeen to twenty) and two fifty- to sixt-year-olds is recorded in 160 cities throughout the German-speaking area of Europe. All participants read a number of short texts and word lists, name pictures, translate from English, and take part in a sociobiographic interview and a map task experiment. The resulting corpus will comprise over 1000 hours of orthographically and (in part) phonetically transcribed speech.
The research project “German Today” aims to determine the amount of regional variation in (near-)standard German spoken by young and older educated adults and to identify and locate regional features. To this end, we compile an areally extensive corpus of read and spontaneous German speech. Secondary school students and 50-to-60-year-old locals are recorded in 160 cities throughout the German speaking area of Europe. All participants read a number of short texts and a word list, name pictures, translate words and sentences from English, answer questions in a sociobiographic interview, and take part in a map task experiment. The resulting corpus comprises over 1000 hours of speech, which is transcribed orthographically. Automatically derived broad phonetic transcriptions, selective manual narrow phonetic transcriptions, and variationalist annotations are added. Focussing on phonetic variation we aim to show to what extent national or regional standards exist in spoken German. Furthermore, the linguistic variation due to different contextual styles (read vs. spontaneous speech) shall be analysed. Finally, the corpus enables us to investigate whether linguistic change has occurred in spoken (near-)standard German.
Die Bibliografie des Projekts "Deutsch in Russland" enthält 359 Titel, von denen zwei Drittel auf Russisch sind. Die Inhalte der meisten russischsprachigen Veröffentlichungen werden im Text der Bibliografie kurz zusammengefasst. In der Einführung finden sich einige Anmerkungen zum Forschungsstand nach 1990 und eine Beschreibung der Titelinhalte.