Linguistic Landscapes of the Street
In many cities, street-level language use on signs persists long after political shifts, acting as a weathered archive of community presence. Researchers have observed that shopfronts, hand-painted menus, and neighborhood posters retain minority dialects and scripts for decades, even when daily spoken usage declines. This resilience arises from owners’ attachment to place, the cost of repainting, and the social value of visible identity.


