
A selection of papers from NWAVE 25 Table of Contents
1. Allan Bell And Gary Johnson. Towards a sociolinguistics of style.
2. Miriam Meyerhoff. Engendering identities: Pronoun selection as an
indicator of salient intergroup identities.
3. Carmen Fought. A majority sound change in a minority community.
4. Lisa Ann Lane. Addressing the actuation question for local linguistic
communities.
5. Otto Santa Ana And Claudia Parodi. Typologizing the sociolinguistic
speech community.
6. Natalie Schilling-Estes and Walt Wolfram. Symbolic identity and
language change: A comparative analysis of post-insular /ay/ and /aw/.
7. Barbara M. Horvath and Ronald J. Horvath. The geolinguistics of a
sound change in progress: /l/ vocalization in Australia.
8. Matthew J. Gordon. Urban sound change beyond the cities: The spread
of the Northern Cities chain shift.
9. David Britain. Dialect contact, focusing and phonological rule
complexity: the Koineisation of Fenland English.
10. J. K. Chambers. Sociolinguistic coherence of changes in a standard
dialect.
11. Bridget L. Anderson. Adaptive sociophonetic strategies and dialect
accommodation: /ay/ monophthongization in Cherokee English.
12. Fu-Dong Chiou. Phonetic realization of final engma in Taipei
Mandarin.
13. James Meyers and Gregory R. Guy. Frequency effects in Variable
Lexical Phonology.
14. Charles Boberg. Variation in the nativization of foreign [a] in English.
15. Paul Foulkes. Rule inversion in a British English dialect: A
sociolinguistic investigation of [r]-sandhi in Newcastle upon Tyne.
16. Rakesh M. Bhatt. Optimality and the syntax of lectal variation.
17. Ruth King and Terry Nadasdi. The truth about codeswitching in insular
Acadian.
18. Otto Santa Ana. Empirical analysis of anti-immigrant metaphor in
political discourse.
19. Lanita Jacobs-Huey. Is there an authentic African American speech
community: Carla revisited.
20. Cecilia A. Cutler. Yorkville Crossing: a case study of the influence of
Hip Hop culture on the speech of a white middle class adolescent in
New York City.
21. Naomi Nagy. Modeling contact-induced language change.
Where to go from here
Details on this proceedings series
Go to the main Conference Proceedings in Linguistics page
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