Article published In:
English World-Wide
Vol. 14:2 (1993) ► pp.231248
Cited by

Cited by 9 other publications

CAMERON, DEBORAH
2005. Whingeing and cringing. Critical Quarterly 47:4  pp. 101 ff. DOI logo
Deuber, Dagmar, Stephanie Hackert, Eva Canan Hänsel, Alexander Laube, Mahyar Hejrani & Catherine Laliberté
2022. The Norm Orientation of English in the Caribbean. American Speech 97:3  pp. 265 ff. DOI logo
Hackert, Stephanie
2015. Pseudotitles in Bahamian English. Journal of English Linguistics 43:2  pp. 143 ff. DOI logo
Hackert, Stephanie & Dagmar Deuber
2015. American influence on written Caribbean English. In Grammatical Change in English World-Wide [Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 67],  pp. 389 ff. DOI logo
Holmes, Janet
1997. T-time in New Zealand. English Today 13:3  pp. 18 ff. DOI logo
McKee, Rachel & David McKee
2020. Globalization, hybridity, and vitality in the linguistic ideologies of New Zealand Sign Language users. Language & Communication 74  pp. 164 ff. DOI logo
Meyerhoff, Miriam & Nancy Niedzielski
2003. The globalisation of vernacular variation. Journal of Sociolinguistics 7:4  pp. 534 ff. DOI logo
Nagy, Naomi
2011. Lexical change and language contact: Faetar in Italy and Canada. Journal of Sociolinguistics 15:3  pp. 366 ff. DOI logo
SANDOW, RHYS J., GEORGE BAILEY & NATALIE BRABER
2023. Language change is wicked: semantic and social meaning of a polysemous adjective. English Language and Linguistics  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 27 february 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.