Introduction
Bridging contexts to document sociolinguistic variation in
acquisition
References (14)
References
Bell, Allan. 2014. The
Guidebook to
Sociolinguistics. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
Chevrot, Jean-Pierre, and Anna Ghimenton. 2019. “Bilingualism
and
bidialectalism”. In The
Cambridge handbook of bilingualism, ed.
By Annick De Houwer, and Lourdes Ortega, 510–523. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Chevrot, Jean-Pierre, and Paul Foulkes. 2013. “Introduction:
Language Acquisition and Sociolinguistic
Variation.” Linguistics 51 (2): 251–254.
Eckert, Penelope. 2008. “Variation
and the Indexical Field.” Journal of
Sociolinguistics 12 (4): 453–476.
Foulkes, Paul. 2010. “Exploring
Social-Indexical Knowledge: A Long Past but a Short
History.” Laboratory
Phonology 1: 5–39.
Labov, William. 1972. Sociolinguistic
Patterns. Oxford: Blackwell.
Laks, Bernard. 2013. “Why
is there Variation rather than
Nothing?” Language
Sciences 39: 31–53.
Levinson, S. C. 2012. The
Original Sin of Cognitive
Science. Topics in Cognitive
Science, 4(3), 396–403.
Menn, Lise & Edward Matthei. 1992. The
‘two lexicon’ account of child phonology: Looking back, looking
ahead. In Charles A. Ferguson, Lise Menn & Carol Stoel-Gammon (eds.), Phonological
development: Models, research,
implications, 211–247. Parkton, MD: York Press.
Kinzler, Katherine D., and Jasmine M. DeJesus. (2012, online
first). “Northern = smart and
Southern = nice: The development of accent attitudes in the United
States”. The Quarterly Journal of
Experimental
Psychology 66: 1146–1158.
Kristiansen, Tore, and Stefan Grondelaers (eds). 2013. Language
(De)standardisation in Late Modern Europe: Experimental
Studies. Copenhagen: Novus Press.
Poplack, Shana, Laurent Zentz, and Nathalie Dion. 2012. “Phrase-final
Prepositions in Quebec French: An Empirical Study of Contact,
Code-switching and Resistance to
Convergence.” Bilingualism: Language
and
Cognition 15 (2): 203–225.
Weinreich, Uriel, William Labov, and Marvin I. Herzog. 1968. “Empirical
Foundations for a Theory of Language
Change.” In Directions
for Historical Linguistics: A Symposium, ed.
by Winfred P. Lehmann, and Yakov Malkiel, 96–195. Austin: University of Texas Press.