David Parry (dialectologist)

David Parry is a British dialectologist. He received his education from the University of Sheffield and the University of Leeds; working at the latter school for the renowned dialectologist Harold Orton. He then taught dialectology for almost three decades at Swansea University.

Parry is best known for establishing the Survey of Anglo-Welsh Dialects (SAWD) at Swansea University. He founded the SAWD in 1968 with the aim of recording the "conservative forms" of Welsh English spoken in rural locations in Wales using the same methodology as the Survey of English Dialects (1950-1961). The survey analysed pronunciation, lexis, morphology and syntax based on interviews with informants in ninety locations, who were to be over sixty years of age.[1] The results of the survey for south-east and south-west Wales were published as two volumes in 1977 and 1979.[2][3] To these a companion volume on north Wales was added in 1991.[4] After his retirement in 1995, dialectologist Robert Penhallurick succeeded him as custodian of the SAWD Archive.

References

  1. Aspects of dialect shift in the syntax of Welsh English (Heli Pitkänen, University of Joensuu, Finland)
  2. David Parry, The Survey of Anglo-Welsh Dialects, Vol.1, The South-East, University College, Swansea, 1977
  3. David Parry, The Survey of Anglo-Welsh Dialects, Vol.2, The South-West, University College, Swansea, 1979
  4. Robert J Penhallurick, The Anglo-Welsh Dialects of North Wales - A Survey of Conservative Rural Spoken English in the Counties of Gwynedd and Clwyd, Frankfurt-am-Main, 1991
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