The Cambridge Handbook of World Englishes

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Daniel Schreier, Marianne Hundt, Edgar W. Schneider
Cambridge University Press, Jan 2, 2020 - Language Arts & Disciplines
The plural form 'Englishes' conveys the diversity of English as a global language, pinpointing the growth and existence of a large number of national, regional and social forms. The global spread of English and the new varieties that have emerged around the world has grown to be a vast area of study and research, which intersects multiple disciplines. This Handbook provides a comprehensive and authoritative survey of World Englishes from 1600 to the present day. Covering topics such as variationist sociolinguistics, pragmatics, contact linguistics, linguistic anthropology, corpus- and applied linguistics and language history, it combines discussion of traditional topics with a variety of innovative approaches. The chapters, all written by internationally acclaimed authorities, provide up-to-date discussions of the evolution of different Englishes around the globe, a comprehensive coverage of different models and approaches, and some original perspectives on current challenges.

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About the author (2020)

Daniel Schreier is Professor of English Linguistics at the Universität Zürich. He is author of several books on English in the South Atlantic, has published some sixty articles and has served as co-editor of English World-Wide (2013–19).

Marianne Hundt is Professor of English Linguistics at Universität Zürich. She is the co-ordinator of the International Corpus of English (since 2017), wrote New Zealand English Grammar (1998) and is co-editor of English World-Wide (since 2013).

Edgar W. Schneider is Chair Professor of English Linguistics at the Universität Regensburg, Germany. His many books include Postcolonial English (Cambridge, 2007) and English Around the World (Cambridge, 2010).

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