Article published In:
English World-Wide
Vol. 8:1 (1987) ► pp.2539
Cited by (21)

Cited by 21 other publications

Roberts, Julie & Monica Nesbitt
2023. What Goes Around: Language Change and Glottalization in Vermont. American Speech: A Quarterly of Linguistic Usage DOI logo
Buchstaller, Isabelle, Adam Mearns, Anja Auer & Anne Krause-Lerche
2022. Exploring age-related changes in the realisation of (t). English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English 43:3  pp. 297 ff. DOI logo
Penney, Joshua, Felicity Cox & Anita Szakay
2021. Glottalisation of word-final stops in Australian English unstressed syllables. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 51:2  pp. 229 ff. DOI logo
Eddington, David Ellingson & Earl Kjar Brown
2020. A production and perception study of /t/ glottalization and oral releases following glottals in the US. American Speech  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Penney, Joshua, Felicity Cox, Kelly Miles & Sallyanne Palethorpe
2018. Glottalisation as a cue to coda consonant voicing in Australian English. Journal of Phonetics 66  pp. 161 ff. DOI logo
SMITH, JENNIFER & SOPHIE HOLMES-ELLIOTT
2018. The unstoppable glottal: tracking rapid change in an iconic British variable. English Language and Linguistics 22:3  pp. 323 ff. DOI logo
Meyerhoff, Miriam & Erik Schleef
2014. Hitting an Edinburgh Target: Immigrant Adolescents’ Acquisition of Variation in Edinburgh English. In Sociolinguistics in Scotland,  pp. 103 ff. DOI logo
Schleef, Erik
2013. Glottal replacement of /t/ in two British capitals: Effects of word frequency and morphological compositionality. Language Variation and Change 25:2  pp. 201 ff. DOI logo
Schleef, Erik
2017. Social Meanings across Listener Groups. Journal of English Linguistics 45:1  pp. 28 ff. DOI logo
Eddington, David & Caitlin Channer
2010. American English Has Goʔ A Loʔ Of Glottal Stops: Social Diffusion and Linguistic Motivation. American Speech 85:3  pp. 338 ff. DOI logo
EDDINGTON, DAVID & MICHAEL TAYLOR
2009. T-Glottalization IN AMERICAN ENGLISH. American Speech 84:3  pp. 298 ff. DOI logo
Straw, Michelle & Peter L. Patrick
2007. Dialect acquisition of glottal variation in /t/: Barbadians in Ipswich. Language Sciences 29:2-3  pp. 385 ff. DOI logo
Roberts, Julie
2006. AS OLD BECOMES NEW: GLOTTALIZATION IN VERMONT. American Speech 81:3  pp. 227 ff. DOI logo
Peter Auer, Frans Hinskens & Paul Kerswill
2005. Dialect Change, DOI logo
Milroy, James
1999. Toward a speaker-based account of language change. In Language Change,  pp. 21 ff. DOI logo
BAUER, LAURIE & JANET HOLMES
1996. Getting into a flap!/t/ in New Zealand English. World Englishes 15:1  pp. 115 ff. DOI logo
Holmes, Janet
1995. Time for /t/: Initial /t/ in New Zealand English. Australian Journal of Linguistics 15:2  pp. 127 ff. DOI logo
Holmes, Janet
1997. T-time in New Zealand. English Today 13:3  pp. 18 ff. DOI logo
Milroy, James, Lesley Milroy, Sue Hartley & David Walshaw
1994. Glottal stops and Tyneside glottalization: Competing patterns of variation and change in British English. Language Variation and Change 6:3  pp. 327 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2003. References. In Sociolinguistics,  pp. 231 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2017. Bibliography. In The Handbook of Sociolinguistics,  pp. 453 ff. DOI logo

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