Part of
Focus on the USA
Edited by Edgar W. Schneider
[Varieties of English Around the World G16] 1996
► pp. 297
Cited by

Cited by 80 other publications

Al-Rojaie, Yousef
2020. Mapping perceptions of linguistic variation in Qassim, Saudi Arabia, using GIS technology. Journal of Linguistic Geography 8:1  pp. 9 ff. DOI logo
Albury, Nathan John
2017. The power of folk linguistic knowledge in language policy. Language Policy 16:2  pp. 209 ff. DOI logo
Albury, Nathan John & Max Diaz
2021. From perceptual dialectology to perceptual multilingualism: a Hong Kong case study. Language Awareness 30:2  pp. 152 ff. DOI logo
Alfaraz, Gabriela G.
2014. Dialect perceptions in real time: A restudy of Miami-Cuban perceptions. Journal of Linguistic Geography 2:2  pp. 74 ff. DOI logo
Alfaraz, Gabriela G.
2018. Framing the diaspora and the homeland: language ideologies in the Cuban diaspora. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2018:254  pp. 49 ff. DOI logo
Alfaraz, Gabriela G. & Alexander Mason
2019. Ethnicity and Perceptual Dialectology. American Speech 94:3  pp. 352 ff. DOI logo
Alfaraz, Gabriela G. & Dennis R. Preston
2022. Mapping perceptions diachronically. American Speech  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Wendy Ayres-Bennett & John Bellamy
2021. The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization, DOI logo
Babcock, Rebecca Day
2014. Folk-Linguistic Attitudes in Eastern Massachusetts. Open Journal of Modern Linguistics 04:03  pp. 415 ff. DOI logo
Bailey, Guy & Jan Tillery
1996. The Persistence of Southern American English. Journal of English Linguistics 24:4  pp. 308 ff. DOI logo
Baker, Wendy, David Eddington & Lyndsey Nay
2009. DIALECT IDENTIFICATION: THE EFFECTS OF REGION OF ORIGIN AND AMOUNT OF EXPERIENCE. American Speech 84:1  pp. 48 ff. DOI logo
Becker, Kara
2014. (r) we there yet? The change to rhoticity in New York City English. Language Variation and Change 26:2  pp. 141 ff. DOI logo
Benson, Erica J. & Anneli Williams
2022. Crossing the line: Effect of border representation in perceptual dialectology. Journal of Linguistic Geography 10:2  pp. 67 ff. DOI logo
Bent, Tessa & Rachael F. Holt
2017. Representation of speech variability. WIREs Cognitive Science 8:4 DOI logo
Braber, Natalie
2015. Language perception in the East Midlands in England. English Today 31:1  pp. 16 ff. DOI logo
Braun, Sarah
2020. Mapping Perceptions of Language Variation in Wisconsin. American Speech 95:1  pp. 82 ff. DOI logo
Brown, Earl K.
2015. On the utility of combining production data and perceptual data to investigate regional linguistic variation: The case of Spanish experiential gustar ‘to like, to please’ on Twitter and in an online survey. Journal of Linguistic Geography 3:2  pp. 47 ff. DOI logo
Calamai, Silvia, Duccio Piccardi & Rosalba Nodari
2022. Quantifying folk perceptions of dialect boundaries. A case study from Tuscany (Italy). Journal of Linguistic Geography 10:2  pp. 87 ff. DOI logo
Carmichael, Katie
2016. Place-Linked Expectations and Listener Awareness of Regional Accents. In Awareness and Control in Sociolinguistic Research,  pp. 152 ff. DOI logo
Carmichael, Katie
2018. “Since when does the Midwest have an accent?”. English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English 39:2  pp. 127 ff. DOI logo
Chappell, Whitney
2016. On the social perception of intervocalic /s/ voicing in Costa Rican Spanish. Language Variation and Change 28:3  pp. 357 ff. DOI logo
Chappell, Whitney
2019. Introduction. In Recent Advances in the Study of Spanish Sociophonetic Perception [Issues in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics, 21],  pp. 2 ff. DOI logo
Cramer, Jennifer
2021. Mental maps and perceptual dialectology. Language and Linguistics Compass 15:2 DOI logo
Cramer, Jennifer, Susan Tamasi & Paulina Bounds
2018. Southernness and Our Linguistic Planets of Belief. American Speech 93:3-4  pp. 445 ff. DOI logo
Dajko, Nathalie & Katie Carmichael
2023. Plus ça Change. . . Perceptions of New Orleans English Before and After the Storm. Journal of English Linguistics 51:2  pp. 95 ff. DOI logo
Davis, Lawrence M.
1999. From Confederate Overalls to Designer Jeans. Journal of English Linguistics 27:2  pp. 115 ff. DOI logo
Dickson, Greg & Gautier Durantin
2019. Variation in the reflexive in Australian Kriol. Asia-Pacific Language Variation 5:2  pp. 171 ff. DOI logo
Eckert, Penelope & William Labov
2017. Phonetics, phonology and social meaning. Journal of Sociolinguistics 21:4  pp. 467 ff. DOI logo
Eddington, David Ellingson & Earl Kjar Brown
2020. A production and perception study of /t/ glottalization and oral releases following glottals in the US. American Speech  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Evans, Betsy E. & Dennis R. Preston
2023. 13. Needed Research in Language Regard. Publication of the American Dialect Society 108:1  pp. 246 ff. DOI logo
Fridland, Valerie & Kathryn Bartlett
2006. CORRECTNESS, PLEASANTNESS, AND DEGREE OF DIFFERENCE RATINGS ACROSS REGIONS. American Speech 81:4  pp. 358 ff. DOI logo
Gonçalves, Marcelo Rocha Barros
2021. Sobre a linguística popular de Mário de Andrade. Cadernos de Linguística 2:4  pp. e490 ff. DOI logo
Habasque, Pierre
2021. Isn’t the perception of LIKE by California college students, like, paradoxical?. Sociolinguistic Studies 15:2-4 DOI logo
Hall-Lew, Lauren & Nola Stephens
2012. Country Talk. Journal of English Linguistics 40:3  pp. 256 ff. DOI logo
HARTLEY, LAURA C.
2005. THE CONSEQUENCES OF CONFLICTING STEREOTYPES: BOSTONIAN PERCEPTIONS OF U.S. DIALECTS. American Speech 80:4  pp. 388 ff. DOI logo
Hill, Joseph C.
2015. Language attitudes in Deaf communities. In Sociolinguistics and Deaf Communities,  pp. 146 ff. DOI logo
Hiraga, Yuko
2005. British attitudes towards six varieties of English in the USA and Britain. World Englishes 24:3  pp. 289 ff. DOI logo
José, Brian
2007. Appalachian English in southern Indiana? The evidence from verbal -s. Language Variation and Change 19:3  pp. 249 ff. DOI logo
Kibbee, Douglas A.
2021. Standard Languages in the Context of Language Policy and Planning and Language Rights. In The Cambridge Handbook of Language Standardization,  pp. 201 ff. DOI logo
Kjeldgaard-Christiansen, Jens
2024. The Voice of the People: Populism and Donald Trump’s Use of Informal Voice. Society DOI logo
Kohn, Mary & Trevin Garcia
2023. A new majority. English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English 44:3  pp. 351 ff. DOI logo
Kurinec, Courtney A. & Charles A. Weaver
2019. Dialect on trial: use of African American Vernacular English influences juror appraisals. Psychology, Crime & Law 25:8  pp. 803 ff. DOI logo
Kwon, Soohyun
2018. Phonetic and Phonological Changes of Noam Chomsky. American Speech 93:2  pp. 270 ff. DOI logo
Lindemann, Stephanie
2005. Who speaks “broken English”? US undergraduates’ perceptions of non‐native English1. International Journal of Applied Linguistics 15:2  pp. 187 ff. DOI logo
Lindemann, Stephanie
2006. What the Other Half Gives: the Interlocutor’s Role in Non-native Speaker Performance. In Spoken English, Tesol and Applied Linguistics,  pp. 23 ff. DOI logo
Milroy, Lesley
2000. Britain and the United States: Two Nations Divided by the Same Language (and Different Language Ideologies). Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 10:1  pp. 56 ff. DOI logo
Montgomery, Chris
2016. The Perceptual Dialectology of Wales from the Border. In Sociolinguistics in Wales,  pp. 151 ff. DOI logo
Montgomery, Chris
2018. The Perceptual Dialectology of England. In Sociolinguistics in England,  pp. 127 ff. DOI logo
Morales, Andrea C., Maura L. Scott & Eric A. Yorkston
2012. The Role of Accent Standardness in Message Preference and Recall. Journal of Advertising 41:1  pp. 33 ff. DOI logo
Stephen J. Nagle & Sara L. Sanders
2003. English in the Southern United States, DOI logo
Nesbitt, Monica
2021. The Rise and Fall of the Northern Cities Shift. American Speech 96:3  pp. 332 ff. DOI logo
Nesbitt, Monica
2021. From an indicator to a marker. In Urban Matters [Studies in Language Variation, 27],  pp. 159 ff. DOI logo
Nesbitt, Monica, Suzanne Evans Wagner & Alexander Mason
2019. 7. A Tale of Two Shifts: Movement Toward the Low-Back-Merger Shift in Lansing, Michigan. The Publication of the American Dialect Society 104:1  pp. 144 ff. DOI logo
Niedzielski, Nancy & Dennis R. Preston
2009. Folk Linguistics. In The New Sociolinguistics Reader,  pp. 356 ff. DOI logo
Plichta, Bartlomiej & Dennis R. Preston
2005. The /ay/s have Itthe perception of /ay/ as a north-south stereotype in United States English. Acta Linguistica Hafniensia 37:1  pp. 107 ff. DOI logo
PRESTON, DENNIS R.
2003. PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS. American Speech 78:3  pp. 235 ff. DOI logo
Preston, Dennis R.
2004. Language with an Attitude. In The Handbook of Language Variation and Change,  pp. 39 ff. DOI logo
Preston, Dennis R.
2013. Language with an Attitude. In The Handbook of Language Variation and Change,  pp. 157 ff. DOI logo
Preston, Dennis R.
2013. Linguistic Insecurity Forty Years Later. Journal of English Linguistics 41:4  pp. 304 ff. DOI logo
Preston, Dennis R.
2015. Does language regard vary?. In Responses to Language Varieties [IMPACT: Studies in Language and Society, 39],  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Preston, Dennis R.
2016. Whaddayaknow now?. In Awareness and Control in Sociolinguistic Research,  pp. 177 ff. DOI logo
Preston, Dennis R.
2017. Perceptual Dialectology. In The Handbook of Dialectology,  pp. 177 ff. DOI logo
Preston, Dennis R.
2019. Trouble in LADO-Land: How the Brain Deceives the Ear. In Language Analysis for the Determination of Origin [Language Policy, 16],  pp. 131 ff. DOI logo
Preston, Dennis R.
2020. Language Prejudice. In The International Encyclopedia of Linguistic Anthropology,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Satyanath, Shobha
2022. Standard-ness, national ideologies and their embedding in ‘sociolinguistic theory’. Asia-Pacific Language Variation 8:2  pp. 174 ff. DOI logo
Soukup, Barbara
2012. Current Issues in the Social Psychological Study of ‘Language Attitudes’: Constructionism, Context, and the Attitude–Behavior Link. Language and Linguistics Compass 6:4  pp. 212 ff. DOI logo
THOMAS, ERIK R.
2002. SOCIOPHONETIC APPLICATIONS OF SPEECH PERCEPTION EXPERIMENTS. American Speech 77:2  pp. 115 ff. DOI logo
Villarreal, Dan
2016. 4. “DO I SOUND LIKE A VALLEY GIRL TO You?” PERCEPTUAL DIALECTOLOGY AND LANGUAGE ATTITUDES IN CALIFORNIA. The Publication of the American Dialect Society 101:1  pp. 55 ff. DOI logo
Villarreal, Dan & Mary Kohn
2019. Local meanings for supra-local change: Perceptions of TRAP backing in Kansas1. American Speech  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Villarreal, Dan & Mary Kohn
2021. Local Meanings for Supralocal Change. American Speech 96:1  pp. 45 ff. DOI logo
Walker, Abby, Christina García, Yomi Cortés & Kathryn Campbell-Kibler
2014. Comparing social meanings across listener and speaker groups: The indexical field of Spanish /s/. Language Variation and Change 26:2  pp. 169 ff. DOI logo
Watson, Kevin & Lynn Clark
2015. Exploring listeners’ real-time reactions to regional accents. Language Awareness 24:1  pp. 38 ff. DOI logo
Wolfram, Walt, Caroline Myrick, Jon Forrest & Michael J. Fox
2016. The Significance of Linguistic Variation in the Speeches of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.. American Speech 91:3  pp. 269 ff. DOI logo
Wright, Robyn
2021. Regional perceptions of the 'ejque'. Borealis – An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics 10:1  pp. 103 ff. DOI logo
Yuliati, Yuliati
2014. Final Consonant Clusters Simplification by Indonesian Learners of English and Its Intelligibility in International Context. International Journal of Social Science and Humanity 4:6  pp. 513 ff. DOI logo
Zaharchuk, Holly A., Adrianna Shevlin & Janet G. van Hell
2021. Are our brains more prescriptive than our mouths? Experience with dialectal variation in syntax differentially impacts ERPs and behavior. Brain and Language 218  pp. 104949 ff. DOI logo
Ó Murchadha, Noel P.
2016. The efficacy of unitary and polynomic models of codification in minority language contexts: ideological, pragmatic and pedagogical issues in the codification of Irish. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 37:2  pp. 199 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2003. References. In Sociolinguistics,  pp. 231 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2005. References. In Clinical Sociolinguistics,  pp. 281 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2020. The Analysis of Sociolinguistic Change over the Lifespan. In African American Language,  pp. 22 ff. DOI logo

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