Part of
New Zealand English
Edited by Allan Bell and Koenraad Kuiper
[Varieties of English Around the World G25] 2000
► pp. 221248
Cited by

Cited by 26 other publications

Bauer, Laurie
2015. Australian and New Zealand English. In The Handbook of English Pronunciation,  pp. 269 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
Degani, Marta
2017. Cultural Conceptualisations in Stories of Māori-English Bilinguals: The Cultural Schema of marae. In Advances in Cultural Linguistics [Cultural Linguistics, ],  pp. 661 ff. DOI logo
Gordon, Elizabeth, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea Sudbury & Peter Trudgill
2004. New Zealand English, DOI logo
Gordon, Elizabeth & Margaret Maclagan
2001. 'Capturing a Sound Change': A Real Time Study Over 15 Years of the NEAR/SQUARE Diphthong Merger in New Zealand English. Australian Journal of Linguistics 21:2  pp. 215 ff. DOI logo
Holmes, Janet, Meredith Marra & Bernadette Vine
2019. Telling stories: analysing Māori and Pākehā workplace narratives. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 49:sup1  pp. 104 ff. DOI logo
Hughes, Shaun F. D.
2004. Was there ever a “Māori English”?. World Englishes 23:4  pp. 565 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
Maclagan, Margaret & Jeanette King
2007. Aspiration of Plosives in Māori: Change Over Time. Australian Journal of Linguistics 27:1  pp. 81 ff. DOI logo
Maclagan, Margaret, Jeanette King & Gail Gillon
2008. Maori English. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 22:8  pp. 658 ff. DOI logo
Maclagan, Margaret, Catherine I. Watson, Ray Harlow, Jeanette King & Peter Keegan
2017. Investigating the Sound Change in the New Zealand English Nurse Vowel /ᴈ:/. Australian Journal of Linguistics 37:4  pp. 465 ff. DOI logo
Mechler, Johanna & Isabelle Buchstaller
2019. [In]stability in the use of a stable variable. Linguistics Vanguard 5:s2 DOI logo
ONYSKO, ALEXANDER
2016. Modeling world Englishes from the perspective of language contact. World Englishes 35:2  pp. 196 ff. DOI logo
Onysko, Alexander
2017. Conceptual metaphor variation in meaning interpretation. Cognitive Linguistic Studies 4:1  pp. 7 ff. DOI logo
Smith, Philippa
2012. Bell, Allan. In The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics, DOI logo
Starks, Donna
2010. Review of Burridge & Kortmann (2008): Varieties of English The Pacific and Australasia. English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English 31:1  pp. 94 ff. DOI logo
Starks, Donna & Hayley Reffell
2006. Reading ‘TH’: Vernacular variants in Pasifika Englishes in South Auckland1. Journal of Sociolinguistics 10:3  pp. 382 ff. DOI logo
STARKS, DONNA & LAURA THOMPSON
2009. Agreement patterns in existential constructions in the New Zealand Niuean community1. World Englishes 28:3  pp. 319 ff. 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
Vine, Bernadette
2016. Pragmatic Markers at Work in New Zealand. In Talking at Work,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Vine, Bernadette & Janet Holmes
2023. Doing leadership in style: Pragmatic markers in New Zealand workplace interaction. Intercultural Pragmatics 20:1  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2013. References. In The Guidebook to Sociolinguistics,  pp. 333 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2013.  L anguage in S pace . In The Guidebook to Sociolinguistics,  pp. 229 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2013. Reference Guide for Varieties of English. In A Dictionary of Varieties of English,  pp. 363 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]

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.