Introduction published In:
Variation in the Pacific: Part I
Edited by Eri Kashima and Miriam Meyerhoff
[Asia-Pacific Language Variation 6:2] 2020
► pp. 151159
References (29)
References
De Vries, Lourens (2012). Speaking of clans: Language in Awyu-Ndumut communities of Indonesian West Papua. International Journal of the Sociology of Language, 2012(214), 5–26.Google Scholar
Dotte, Anne-Laure (2013). Le iaai aujourd’hui: Évolutions sociolinguistiques et linguistiques d’une langue kanak de Nouvelle-Calédonie (Ouvéa, Îles Loyauté) [Laai Today: Internal and external change in an indigenous language of New Caledonia (Ouvea, Loyalty Islands)]. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Université Lumière-Lyon 2.Google Scholar
Evans, Ncholas (2017). Did language evolve in multilingual settings? Biology and Philosophy, 32(6), 905–933. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Evans, Nicholas, Arka, Wayan I., Carroll, Matthew J., Choi, Yun Jung, Döhler, Christian, Gast, Volker, Kashima, Eri, Mittag, Emile, Olsson, Bruno, Quinn, Kyla, Schokkin, Dineke, Tama, Phillip, van Tongeren, Charlotte, & Siegel, Jeff (2018). The languages of Southern New Guinea. In Bill Palmer (Ed.), The languages and linguistics of New Guinea: A comprehensive guide (pp. 640–774). Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.Google Scholar
Hammarström, Harald (2010). Status of least documented language families. Language Documentation and Conservation, 41, 177–212.Google Scholar
Hoenigman, Darja (2012). A battle of languages: Spirit possession and changing linguistic ideologies in a Sepik society, Papua New Guinea. The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 23(3), 290–317. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Klöwer, Milan, Hopkins, Debbie, Allen, Myles, & Higham, James (2020, July 16). An analysis of ways to decarbonize conference travel after COVID-19. Nature, 583(7816), 356–359. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lindsey, Kate (in press). Pahoturi River phonemics: A comparative illustration. Language Documentation and Conservation Special Publication.
Labov, William (2015). The discovery of the unexpected. Asia-Pacific Language Variation, 1(1), 7–22. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
List, Johann-Mattis, Walworth, Mary, Greenhill, Simon J., Tresoldi, Tiago, & Forkel, Robert (2018). Sequence comparison in historical linguistics. Journal of Language Evolution, 3(2), 130–144. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Mansfield, John B. (2015). Consonant lenition as a sociophonetic variable in Murrinh Patha (Australia). Language Variation and Change, 27(2), 203–225. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Mansfield, John B., & Stanford, James N. (2017). Documenting sociolinguistic variation in lesser-studied indigenous communities: Challenges and practical solutions. Language Documentation and Conservation, 131, 116–136.Google Scholar
Meakins, Felicity, Hua, Xia, Algy, Cassandra, & Bromham, Lindell (2019). The birth of a new languages does not favour simplification. Language, 95(2), 294–332. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Meyerhoff, Miriam (2017). Writing a linguistic symphony: Analyzing variation while doing language documentation. Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue Canadienne de Linguistique, 62(4), 525–549. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Meyerhoff, Miriam, & Stanford, James N. (2015). “Tings change, all tings change”: The changing face of sociolinguistics with a global perspective. In Dick Smakman & Patrick Heinrich (Eds.), Globalising sociolinguistics (pp. 1–15). New York, NY: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nettle, Daniel (1999). Linguistic diversity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
O’Shannessy, Carmel (2013). The role of multiple sources in the formation of an innovative auxiliary category in Light Warlpiri, a new Australian mixed language. Language, 89(2), 328–353. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Palmer, Bill (2018). Language families of the New Guinea Area. In Bill Palmer (Ed.), The languages and linguistics of New Guinea: A comprehensive guide (pp. 1–20). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Posth, Cosimo, Nägele, Kathrin, Colleran, Heidi, Valentin, Frédérique, Bedford, Stuart, Kami, Kaitip W., Shing, Richard, Buckley, Hallie, Kinaston, Rebecca, Walworth, Mary, Clark, Geoffrey R., Reepmeyer, Christian, Flexner, James, Maric, Tamara, Moser, Johannes, Gresky, Julia, Kiko, Lawrence, Robson, Kathryn J., Auckland, Kathryn,… Powell, Adam (2018). Language continuity despite population replacement in Remote Oceania. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 21, 731–740. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Ross, Malcolm (2007). Calquing and metatypy. Journal of Language Contact, 1(1), 116–143. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Stasch, Rupert (2007). Demon language. The otherness of Indonesian in a Papuan community. In Miki Makihara & Bambi B. Schieffelin (Eds.), Consequences of contact: Language ideology and sociocultural transformations in Pacific societies (pp. 96–124). Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2009). Society of others: Kinship and mourning in a West Papuan Place. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Strong, Kate A., Lindsey, Kate, & Drager, Katie (2019, October 10–12). Linking power and prestige: Gender, oration, and variable affrication in Ende. Paper presented at News Ways of Analyzing Variation 48, Eugene, OR, United States.
Tamminga, Meredith (2016). Persistence in phonological and morphological variation. Language Variation and Change, 28(3), 335–356. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Vaughan, Jill, & Singer, Ruth (2018). Indigenous multilingualisms past and present. Language and Communication, 621, 83–90. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Walworth, Mary (2014). Eastern Polynesian: The linguistic evidence revisited. Oceanic Linguistics, 53(2), 256–272. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Weinreich, Uriel (1963). Languages in contact: Findings and problems. The Hague: Mouton.Google Scholar