Part of
Papers from the 5th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics
Edited by Sylvia M. Adamson, Vivien A. Law, Nigel Vincent and Susan Wright
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 65] 1990
► pp. 245
Cited by

Cited by 27 other publications

John Algeo
2001. The Cambridge History of the English Language, DOI logo
Britain, David
1997. Dialect contact and phonological reallocation: “Canadian Raising” in the English Fens. Language in Society 26:1  pp. 15 ff. DOI logo
Robert Burchfield
1994. The Cambridge History of the English Language, DOI logo
Clark, Lynn & Kevin Watson
2016. Phonological leveling, diffusion, and divergence: /t/ lenition in Liverpool and its hinterland. Language Variation and Change 28:1  pp. 31 ff. DOI logo
Filppula, Markku
2003. The quest for the most ‘parsimonious’ explanations: endogeny vs. contact revisited. In Motives for Language Change,  pp. 161 ff. DOI logo
Friesner, Michael
2010. Une prononciation «tsipéquement» québécoise?: La diffusion de deux aspects stéréotypés du français canadien. Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique 55:1  pp. 27 ff. DOI logo
Gordon, Elizabeth, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea Sudbury & Peter Trudgill
2004. New Zealand English, DOI logo
Hernández‐Campoy, Juan M. & Natalie Schilling
2012. The Application of the Quantitative Paradigm to Historical Sociolinguistics: Problems with the Generalizability Principle. In The Handbook of Historical Sociolinguistics,  pp. 61 ff. DOI logo
Hickey, Raymond
2002. Foreword. Language Sciences 24:3-4  pp. 187 ff. DOI logo
Hickey, Raymond
2019. The Colonial and Postcolonial Expansion of English. In The Cambridge Handbook of World Englishes,  pp. 25 ff. DOI logo
Kerswill, Paul
2020. Contact and New Varieties. In The Handbook of Language Contact,  pp. 241 ff. DOI logo
Kytö, Merja
2019. English in North America. In The Cambridge Handbook of World Englishes,  pp. 160 ff. DOI logo
Roger Lass
2000. The Cambridge History of the English Language, DOI logo
Lass, Roger
2000. Phonology and Morphology. In The Cambridge History of the English Language,  pp. 56 ff. DOI logo
Lass, Roger
2002. South African English. In Language in South Africa,  pp. 104 ff. DOI logo
McMahon, April M. S.
1991. Lexical phonology and sound change: the case of the Scottish vowel length rule. Journal of Linguistics 27:1  pp. 29 ff. DOI logo
Mesthrie, Rajend
2010. Socio‐phonetics and social change: Deracialisation of the GOOSE vowel in South African English1. Journal of Sociolinguistics 14:1  pp. 3 ff. DOI logo
MONTGOMERY, MICHAEL
2003. THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN ENGLISH. The Publication of the American Dialect Society 88:1  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
MONTGOMERY, MICHAEL
2005. PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS. American Speech 80:4  pp. 341 ff. DOI logo
Schreier, Daniel
2017. Dialect Formation in Isolated Communities. Annual Review of Linguistics 3:1  pp. 347 ff. DOI logo
Schreier, Daniel, Marianne Hundt & Edgar W. Schneider
2019. World Englishes: An Introduction. In The Cambridge Handbook of World Englishes,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Trudgill, Peter
2006. Dialect Mixture versus Monogenesis in Colonial Varieties: The Inevitability of Canadian English?. Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique 51:2-3  pp. 265 ff. DOI logo
Tuten, Donald N.
Wawra, Daniela
2012. New Zealand English: A History of Hybridization. In Conceptualizing Cultural Hybridization [Transcultural Research – Heidelberg Studies on Asia and Europe in a Global Context, ],  pp. 159 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2008. REFERENCES. The Publication of the American Dialect Society 93:1  pp. 311 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2018. References. The Publication of the American Dialect Society 103:1  pp. 191 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2023. References. In Sounds of English Worldwide,  pp. 354 ff. DOI logo

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