Article published In:
Diachronica
Vol. 17:1 (2000) ► pp.111138
Cited by (21)

Cited by 21 other publications

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Capano, Marta & Michele Bianconi
2023. The Ancient Greek Datives in ‐essi: Contact or Independent Innovations?1. Transactions of the Philological Society 121:3  pp. 357 ff. DOI logo
Knooihuizen, Remco
2023. Phonological Change. In The Linguistics of the History of English,  pp. 47 ff. DOI logo
Sharma, Deepak
2023. RECENT ADVANCES IN SCIENCES, ENGINEERING, INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & MANAGEMENT [RECENT ADVANCES IN SCIENCES, ENGINEERING, INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & MANAGEMENT, 2782],  pp. 020033 ff. DOI logo
Cole, Amanda
2022. Cockney moved East: the dialect of the first generation of East Londoners raised in Essex. Dialectologia et Geolinguistica 30:1  pp. 91 ff. DOI logo
Jin, Wenhua & David J. Silva
2017. Parallel Voice Onset Time shift in Chinese Korean. Asia-Pacific Language Variation 3:1  pp. 41 ff. DOI logo
Przewozny, Anne & Cécile Viollain
2016. On the representation and evolution of Australian English and New Zealand English. Anglophonia :21 DOI logo
Hay, Jennifer
2012. Analyzing the ONZE data as evidence for sound change. In The Oxford Handbook of the History of English,  pp. 94 ff. DOI logo
Hay, Jennifer & Alhana Clendon
2012. (Non)-rhoticity: Lessons from New Zealand English. In The Oxford Handbook of the History of English,  pp. 761 ff. DOI logo
Fagyal, Zsuzsanna, Samarth Swarup, Anna María Escobar, Les Gasser & Kiran Lakkaraju
2010. Centers and peripheries: Network roles in language change. Lingua 120:8  pp. 2061 ff. DOI logo
Britain, David
2008. When is a change not a change? A case study on the dialect origins of New Zealand English. Language Variation and Change 20:2  pp. 187 ff. DOI logo
Kerswill, Paul, Eivind Nessa Torgersen & Susan Fox
2008. Reversing “drift”: Innovation and diffusion in the London diphthong system. Language Variation and Change 20:3  pp. 451 ff. DOI logo
Smith, Jennifer
2005. David Britainand Jenny Cheshire(eds.). Social Dialectology: In Honour of Peter Trudgill(IMPACT: Studies in Language and Society).. Journal of Sociolinguistics 9:1  pp. 142 ff. DOI logo
Gordon, Elizabeth, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea Sudbury & Peter Trudgill
2004. New Zealand English, DOI logo
Hay, Jennifer & Daniel Schreier
2004. Reversing the trajectory of language change: Subject–verb agreement with be in New Zealand English. Language Variation and Change 16:03 DOI logo
Hickey, Raymond
2003. How do dialects get the features they have? On the process of new dialect formation. In Motives for Language Change,  pp. 213 ff. DOI logo
Trudgill, Peter, Margaret MaClagan & Gillian Lewis
2003. Linguistic Archaeology. Journal of English Linguistics 31:2  pp. 103 ff. DOI logo
Butters, Ronald R.
2001. Chance as Cause of Language Variation and Change. Journal of English Linguistics 29:3  pp. 201 ff. DOI logo
Woods, Nicola J.
2001. Internal and external dimensions of language change: the great divide? Evidence from New Zealand English. Linguistics 39:5 DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2008. REFERENCES. The Publication of the American Dialect Society 93:1  pp. 311 ff. DOI logo

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