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SHEFFIELD

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... forged through marriage and apprenticeship gave ... Plural yous. Lenition of final voiceless stops. Generic the. Double modals. Second person pronouns ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SHEFFIELD


1
SHEFFIELD
  • Life on the edge in the largest village in the
    world.

2
On the edge
  • Sheffield is on the edge and between things. The
    largest city in Yorkshire, it lies at the foot of
    the county, little more than a stones throw from
    Derbyshire or Nottinghamshire. Similarly, it
    straddles the border between the midlands and the
    north. To a southerner, it is in the north, to a
    northerner it is a long way south. As a locus,
    Sheffield is an island geographically central to
    the country. (Fine 1992 9)

3
Highland-lowland division
  • Sheffield is the only city to lie astride this
    division. To the west of the rivers Don and Sheaf
    are hills, to their east are plains.
  • (Fine 1992 3)

4
Mercia and Northumbria
  • Sheffield lies on the border of Anglo-Saxon
    Northumbria and Mercia. The border changed
    several times. Clumps of Mercians, Northumbrians
    and Britons lived together in what had become a
    bordrland, where political boundaries were
    altered by acts of sword rather than acts of
    parliament.

5
Danelaw
  • Danish settlements, characterised by thorpe
    elements, cluster to the east of Sheffield.

6
Sheffield as a border city
  • Highland/ Lowland
  • Northumbria/ Mercia
  • Archbishopric of York/ Canterbury
  • Place- and river-names Dore door, narrow
    passage Sheaf boundary.
  • Present-day North/ Midlands

7
The largest village
  • Sheffield has been famous for cutlery since at
    least the 14th century. Chaucer Reeves Tale A
    Sheffield thwittel bare he in his hose.
    (thwittel a type of knife). Made in Sheffield
    already a brand of quality.
  • The industry developed through a system of small
    workshops run by little mesters. Workers came
    from the immediately surrounding areas.

8
17th century Immigration
  • Hey (1998 33-4)
  • For a brief period between 24th November 1653
    and 5th December 1660 the marriage registers of
    Sheffield parish record the place of residence
    for both partners. No bridegroom came from
    further north than Leeds or further south than
    Nottingham and all but ten of them lived within
    ten miles of the centre of Sheffield.
  • Between 1625 and 1649 the fathers of 23 of
    apprentices lived in Sheffield township, 20 in
    rural parts of Sheffield township, 41.3 within
    21 miles, and only 16.2 21 miles or more away.

9
Village networks
  • Most families had been settled in the
    neighbourhood for several generations. The
    continuity of local surnames is particularly
    marked in the cutlery trades. A shared interest
    in the manufacture of cutlery and links forged
    through marriage and apprenticeship gave the
    people of Hallamshire a real sense of common
    identity. By the sixteenth century, the place and
    the people had acquired an identity whose
    distinctiveness was recognised throughout
    England (Hey 1998 34)

10
The Steel City 19th-century immigration
  • 1841 census The distances that some migrants
    had travelled were greater than in previous
    centuries 327 Sheffielders had surnames
    beginning with Mc and 82 had names beginning with
    O but on the whole the catchment area was
    similar to what it had always been. (Hey (1998
    145)

11
Big Steel
  • Development of large-scale steelworks in the
    second half of the 19th century.
  • 1851 census
  • 36.3 born outside the borough boundary.
  • 21.5 born in Yorkshire or Derbyshire
  • 5.6 in Leics, Lincs or Notts
  • 3.3 Irish, some Scots. (Hey 1998)

12
Irish migration
  • More Irish people settled in Sheffield in the
    next few decades after 1851. They came mostly
    from western and central Ireland and congregated
    in the north-western part of the central
    township, where in 1861 some enumerators
    districts contained as many as 25 per cent Irish
    residents (if English-born children of Irish
    parents are counted.) The Irish in Sheffield were
    never as numerous as those in Leeds or the
    industrial towns of Lancashire. (Hey 1998 148).

13
Condition of the Irish in Sheffield
  • Holland An enquiry into the Moral, Social and
    Intellectual Condition of the Industrial Classes
    of Sheffield
  • I am at present attending three whose homes are
    scenes of wretchedness that could not be
    surpassed by anything in Ireland. It is often
    necessary to insist on their going to the
    workhouse, simply for protection from cold and
    hunger. (cited in Pollard 1959 21)

14
Conditions of the Irish (cont.)
  • Pollard (1959 21-2)
  • They lived in the most insanitary districts,
    sharing their slums with pigs and other domestic
    animals and with lodgers even more wretched than
    themselves, cheek by jowl with the riff-raff of
    the underworld, which every large city seemed to
    breed, and the inhabitants of common
    lodging-houses. In Sheffield, however, the small
    number of Irish-born citizens made their problems
    less acute than in other large towns in the North.

15
Influence of Scots and Irish
  • There is virtually no evidence of any substantial
    Scots in-migration
  • Irish migration is small compared to other
    northern towns and cities
  • Where Irish were relatively numerous, they
    clustered in the poorest districts, drawing
    attention from social commentators for the
    wretchedness of their lives.
  • The village nature of Sheffield, with its
    long-established networks of long-settled
    families, would militate against the Irish having
    any substantial influence.

16
Linguistic evidence
  • Accounts of the Sheffield dialect go back to at
    least the early 19th century (Hunter 1829). The
    strong sense of identity forged by the close
    networks of the cutlery industry is reflected in
    pride in the dialect.

17
Dogs that didnt bark
  • There is no evidence in accounts of the Sheffield
    dialect for features identified elsewhere as
    marking Scots and / or Irish influence
  • Plural yous
  • Lenition of final voiceless stops
  • Generic the
  • Double modals

18
Second person pronouns
  • Yous absent from Sheffield, but (in more
    traditional dialect) Thee/ thou fulfil the
    function of number contrast and provide a
    vernacular variant. Thee-ing and tha-ing is
    used as a term meaning to speak in broad dialect.
    One elderly female informant from the Survey of
    Sheffield Usage said to the interviewer Thee
    thee and tha thyself and see how thou likes it.

19
Spread of yous
  • There is evidence of yous spreading to areas in
    which it was not used until recently. A recent
    student survey in Warrington (midway between
    Manchester and Liverpool) provides apparent-time
    evidence for its introduction within the last 15
    years. Although Warrington has a sizeable
    population of Irish ancestry (of which I am a
    product!), this is a case of a feature being
    transferred, not directly from Hiberno-English,
    but either from the neighbouring cities (yous
    found I both Liverpool and inner-city
    Manchester), or, given the disappearance of thou,
    simply to broaden the vernacular base
    (Meyerhoff Niedzelski). I have found no evidence
    of yous in Sheffield, but, since thou is
    receding, it could appear in future.

20
False friends
  • Some words found in glossaries of Sheffield
    dialect (e.g. Hunter 1829, Bywater 1854, Addy
    1888), appear to be Scots or Irish. However,
    these are or were in use throughout the North of
    England so cannot be attributed to dialect
    contact in any specific location.

21
Boke Hunter to boken, to nauseate, ready to
vomit.
  • Wright
  • BOKE v.2 and sb. Sc. Irel. Nhb. Cum. Wm. Yks.
    Lan. Chs. Der. Not. Lin. Pem.
  • Sooa nivver boak at tnastiest pill. Leeds Merc
    Suppl (Nov 14 1891)
  • Also cited from e. Yorks in Marshalls Rural
    economy 1788.

22
Crack Hunter to boast
  • Commonly assumed to be a recent import from Irish
    craic. However, Wright
  • Var. dial. Uses in Sc. Irel. Eng. And Colon.
  • 7. Talk, conversation, gossip, chat. Citations
    from Scotland, Northumberland, Durham, Yorks,
    Lancs, Cheshire.
  • n. Yorks He stopped for a bit of a crack (1865)
  • W. Yorks Cracks in tingle neuk (1895)

23
Crack (cont.)
  • OED gives loud talk, boast, brag arch. and
    dial. brisk talk, conversation Sc. and northern
    dialect.
  • Meaning of talk, gossip seems established
    throughout Scotland and the North of England.
    Could more recent meaning be due to semantic
    transference c.f. Old English/ Scandinavian
    dream?

24
Conclusions
  • No solid evidence of Scots or Irish influence on
    the dialect of Sheffield.
  • The critical mass required for influence via
    dialect contact never reached
  • Sheffield had close networks of artisans linked
    for generations through apprenticeships and
    strategic marriages.
  • This led to early development of urban identity
  • External influences less likely to affect the
    dialect.
  • Immigration from surrounding counties would
    reinforce the border nature of Sheffield and
    its dialect.

25
References
  • Addy, S. O. (1888) A Glossary of Words Used in
    the Neighbourhood of Sheffield London Trubner
    for the English Dialect Society
  • Bywater, A. (1854) The Sheffield Dialect London
    Halifax Sheffield William Evans Milner and
    Sowerby Rodgers and Fowler
  • Fine, D. (1992) Sheffield History and Guide
    Stroud Alan Sutton.
  • Hey, D. (1998) A History of Sheffield Lancaster
    Carnegie Publishing
  • Hunter, J. (1888) The Hallamshire Glossary
    London Wiliam Pickering
  • Meyerhoff, M. and Niedzielski, N. (2003) The
    globalisation of vernacular variation, Journal
    of Sociolinguistics 7 (4) 534-555.
  • Pollard, S. (1959) A History of Labour in
    Sheffield Liverpool Liverpool University Press.
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