Cited by

Cited by 35 other publications

Baker, Adam, Diana Archangeli & Jeff Mielke
2011. Variability in American English s-retraction suggests a solution to the actuation problem. Language Variation and Change 23:3  pp. 347 ff. DOI logo
Bauer, Laurie
2020. Studying Language Change in the Present, with Special Reference to English. In The Handbook of Historical Linguistics,  pp. 214 ff. DOI logo
Blust, Robert
2017. Odd conditions. Journal of Historical Linguistics 7:3  pp. 322 ff. DOI logo
Cristià, Alejandrina & Amanda Seidl
2008. Is Infants' Learning of Sound Patterns Constrained by Phonological Features?. Language Learning and Development 4:3  pp. 203 ff. DOI logo
Harrington, Jonathan, Felicitas Kleber, Ulrich Reubold, Florian Schiel & Mary Stevens
2018. Linking Cognitive and Social Aspects of Sound Change Using Agent‐Based Modeling. Topics in Cognitive Science 10:4  pp. 707 ff. DOI logo
Hartmann, Frederik & Chiara Riegger
2022. The Burgundian language and its phylogeny. NOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution 75:1  pp. 42 ff. DOI logo
Hinskens, Frans
2020. The Expanding Universe of the Study of Sound Change. In The Handbook of Historical Linguistics,  pp. 5 ff. DOI logo
Joseph, Brian D.
2012. Lexical Diffusion and the Regular Transmission of Language Change in its Sociohistorical Context. In The Handbook of Historical Sociolinguistics,  pp. 408 ff. DOI logo
Joseph, Brian D.
2015. Multiple sources and multiple causes multiply explored. In On Multiple Source Constructions in Language Change [Benjamins Current Topics, 79],  pp. 205 ff. DOI logo
Koenig, Laura L., Christine H. Shadle, Jonathan L. Preston & Christine R. Mooshammer
2013. Toward Improved Spectral Measures of /s/: Results From Adolescents. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 56:4  pp. 1175 ff. DOI logo
Marr, Clayton & David Mortensen
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Denaturalized Phonetic Processes. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 221 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Building on the Tradition. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 64 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. How Language Change is Investigated. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 12 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I, DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Vowel Shifts and the Middle English Vowels. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 270 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Introduction. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Reconstructing Language History. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 39 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Motivations of Language Change. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 123 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Analogy and Systematic Repair. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 97 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Inverted Operations. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 205 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Natural Processes. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 171 ff. DOI logo
Miller, D. Gary
2010. Tempo and Mora in Phonological Change. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 238 ff. DOI logo
Moreton, Elliott
2021. 2. Phonological Abstractness In English Diphthong Raising. The Publication of the American Dialect Society 106:1  pp. 13 ff. DOI logo
Morley, Rebecca L
2014. Implications of an Exemplar-Theoretic Model of Phoneme Genesis: A Velar Palatalization Case Study. Language and Speech 57:1  pp. 3 ff. DOI logo
Nesbitt, Monica
2023. Phonological emergence and social reorganization: Developing a nasal /æ/ system in Lansing, Michigan. Language Variation and Change 35:3  pp. 273 ff. DOI logo
Phillips, Betty S.
2020. Spread across the Lexicon. In The Handbook of Historical Linguistics,  pp. 343 ff. DOI logo
Rutter, Ben
2011. Acoustic analysis of a sound change in progress: The consonant cluster /stɹ/ in English. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 41:1  pp. 27 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2010. Special Phonetic Symbols. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 288 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2010. Preface. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. xii ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2010. Primary Sources: Texts and Editions. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. 293 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2010. Copyright Page. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. iv ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2010. Bibliographical Abbreviations. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. xxix ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2010. Abbreviations. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. xvii ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2010. Dating and Other Conventions. In Language Change and Linguistic Theory, Volume I,  pp. xv ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 7 march 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.