Publications
Bowie, David. 2003. Early development of the card-cord merger in Utah. American Speech 78 (1) : 31–51.
Faflik, David. 2003. Young American puns: antebellum wordplay and democratic Manhattan. American Speech 78 (1) : 75–92.
Fridland, Valerie. 2003. Network strength and the realization of the Southern vowel shift among African Ammericans in Memphis, Tennessee. American Speech 78 (1) : 3–30.
Horvath, Barbara and Sylvie Dubois. 2003. Creole and cajuns: a portrait in black and white. American Speech 78 (2) : 192–207.
Wolfram, Walt. 2003. Language variation in the American South: an introduction. American Speech 78 (2) : 123–129.
Bamiro, Edmund O. 1997. Lexical Innovation in Ghanaian English: Some Examples from Recent Fiction. American Speech 72 (1) : 105–112.
Bartens, Angela. 1997. Review of $Trinidad Yoruba: From Mother Tongue to Memory. American Speech 72 (1) : 97–101.
Bills, Garland D. 1997. New Mexican Spanish: Demise of the Earliest European Variety in the United States. American Speech 72 (2) : 154–171.
Hannah, Dawn. 1997. Copula Absence in Samaná English: Implications for Research on the Linguistic History of African-American Vernacular English. American Speech 72 (4) : 339–372.
Jacobs, Greg. 1997. Review of $Beyond the Lavender Lexicon: Authenticity, Imagination, and Appropriation in Lesbian and Gay Languages. American Speech 72 (2) : 200–209.
MacGregor-Mendoza, Patricia. 1997. Review of $Readings in Language and Mind. American Speech 72 (2) : 209–212.
Picone, Michael D. 1997. Enclave Dialect Contraction: An External Overview of Louisiana French. American Speech 72 (2) : 117–153.
Schilling-Estes, Natalie. 1997. Accommodation versus Concentration: Dialect Death in Two Post-Insular Island Communities. American Speech 72 (1) : 12–32.
Shields, Kenneth. 1997. Positive Anymore in Southeastern Pennsylvania. American Speech 72 (2) : 217–220.
Slotkin, Alan R. 1997. The Ecological Newspeak of Kim Stanley Robinson. American Speech 72 (4) : 440–443.
Tagliamonte, Sali A. 1997. Obsolescence in the English Perfect? Evidence from Samaná English. American Speech 72 (1) : 33–68.