Part of
New Zealand English
Edited by Allan Bell and Koenraad Kuiper
[Varieties of English Around the World G25] 2000
► pp. 146172
Cited by

Cited by 21 other publications

Bauer, Laurie
2015. Australian and New Zealand English. In The Handbook of English Pronunciation,  pp. 269 ff. DOI logo
Cruttenden, Alan
2007. Intonational diglossia: a case study of Glasgow. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 37:3  pp. 257 ff. DOI logo
D'Arcy, Alexandra
2010. Quoting ethnicity: Constructing dialogue in Aotearoa/New Zealand1. Journal of Sociolinguistics 14:1  pp. 60 ff. DOI logo
Fletcher, Janet & Jonathan Harringtonb
2001. High-Rising Terminals and Fall-Rise Tunes in Australian English. Phonetica 58:4  pp. 215 ff. DOI logo
Fletcher, Janet, Lesley Stirling, Ilana Mushin & Roger Wales
2002. Intonational Rises and Dialog Acts in the Australian English Map Task. Language and Speech 45:3  pp. 229 ff. DOI logo
Foulkes, Paul
2020. Phonological Variation. In The Handbook of English Linguistics,  pp. 407 ff. DOI logo
Henriksen, Nicholas
2013. Style, prosodic variation, and the social meaning of intonation. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 43:2  pp. 153 ff. DOI logo
Innes, Bronwen
2007. “Everything Happened So Quickly?” HRT Intonation in New Zealand Courtrooms. Research on Language & Social Interaction 40:2-3  pp. 227 ff. DOI logo
Kiesling, Scott F.
2019. English in Australia and New Zealand. In The Handbook of World Englishes,  pp. 70 ff. DOI logo
Kochetova, Mariya Germanovna
2018. MODERN ENGLISH IN AUSTRALASIA: LINGUO-CULTURAL FEATURES AND PROSPECTS FOR DEVELOPMENT. Philology. Theory & Practice :2  pp. 90 ff. DOI logo
Kytö, Merja
2019. English in North America. In The Cambridge Handbook of World Englishes,  pp. 160 ff. DOI logo
Levon, Erez
2016. Gender, interaction and intonational variation: The discourse functions of High Rising Terminals in London. Journal of Sociolinguistics 20:2  pp. 133 ff. DOI logo
Levon, Erez
2020. Same difference: the phonetic shape of High Rising Terminals in London. English Language and Linguistics 24:1  pp. 49 ff. DOI logo
Maclagan, Margaret, Jeanette King & Gail Gillon
2008. Maori English. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 22:8  pp. 658 ff. DOI logo
Nance, Claire, Sam Kirkham, Kate Lightfoot & Luke Carroll
2022. Intonational Variation in the North-West of England: The Origins of a Rising Contour in Liverpool. Language and Speech 65:4  pp. 1007 ff. DOI logo
Ouafeu, Yves Talla Sando
2014. Intonation in Cameroon English. In Structural and Sociolinguistic Perspectives on Indigenisation,  pp. 81 ff. DOI logo
Podesva, Robert J.
2011. Salience and the Social Meaning of Declarative Contours. Journal of English Linguistics 39:3  pp. 233 ff. DOI logo
Roche, Jennifer M., Katie Asaro, Bradley J. Morris & Shae D. Morgan
2023. Gender stereotypes and social perception of vocal confidence is mitigated by salience of socio-indexical cues to gender. Frontiers in Psychology 14 DOI logo
Szakay, Anita
2012. Voice quality as a marker of ethnicity in New Zealand: From acoustics to perception1. Journal of Sociolinguistics 16:3  pp. 382 ff. DOI logo
Tyler, Joseph C.
2015. Expanding and Mapping the Indexical Field. Journal of English Linguistics 43:4  pp. 284 ff. DOI logo
Warren, Paul
2005. Issues in the Study of Intonation in Language Varieties. Language and Speech 48:4  pp. 345 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 10 april 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.