@article{oai:ushimane.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001021, author = {横田, 由美 and YOKOTA, Yumi}, journal = {総合政策論叢}, month = {Feb}, note = {論文, Danes were officially allowed to settle down in the northern land of the English people after the Edmore treaty signed by the then English king Alfred the Great and the leader of the Viking invaders Guthrum in 886. The area was later called the Danelaw area, which eventually gave birth to a unique society mixed with traditional English and Scandinavian customs. This Anglo-Scandinavian society was, from the eyes of the southern English people, very different from their own. Nonetheless, the Danelaw area was far from homogenous in terms of social natures and systems, religions and speech due to varying degrees of cultural intermingling and the number of new settlers. For historical linguists, one of whose tenets being to explain how languages change, it is important to understand the importance of the historical social atmosphere in inducing the process of language change which would make the English language totally different from what it would have been otherwise.}, pages = {1--15}, title = {デーンロー地域内の社会的不均質性について : 言語史的立場からの考察}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, yomi = {ヨコタ, ユミ} }