Book review
Cynthia Bernstein, Thomas Nunnally & Robin Sabino (eds.). Language Variety in the South Revisited. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama, 1997. xiv + 641 pp. $49.95 hb.
References (10)
References
Carver, Craig M. 1987. American Regional Dialects: A Word Geography. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. 

Cassidy, Frederic G., ed. 1985. Dictionary of American Regional English. Vol. 11: Introduction and A-C. Cambridge, MA: Belknap of Harvard UP.
Cassidy, Frederic G. and Joan Houston Hall, eds. 1991. Dictionary of American Regional English. Vol. 21: D-H. Cambridge, MA: Belknap of Harvard UP.
Chaudenson, Robert. 1992. Des Hes, des hommes, des langues: Essai sur la créolisation linguistique et culturelle. Paris: L’Harmattan.
Dawsey, Cyrus B. and James M. Dawsey, eds. 1995. The Confederados: Old South Immigrants in Brazil Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama.
Hall, Gwendolyn Midlo. 1992. Africans in Colonial Louisiana: The Development of Afro-Creole Culture in the Eighteenth Century. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University.
Hancock, Ian. 1986. “On the classification of Afro-Seminole Creole”. In Michael B. Montgomery and Guy Bailey, eds. 1986: 85–101.
Montgomery, Michael B. and Guy Bailey, eds. 1986. Language Variety in the South: Perspective in Black and White. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama.
Poplack, Shana and David Sankoff. 1987. “The Philadelphia Story in the Spanish Caribbean”. American Speech 621:291–314. 

Tagliamonte, Sali and Shana Poplack. 1988. “How Black English past got to the present: Evidence from Samana”. Language in Society 171:513–33. 
