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Sims, Nandi
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Bailey, Guy, Patricia Cukor-Avila & Juan Salinas
2022. Inheritance and Innovation in the Evolution of Rural African American English,
Boberg, Charles
2021. Accent in North American Film and Television,
Farrington, Charlie, Sharese King & Mary Kohn
2021. Sources of variation in the speech of African Americans: Perspectives from sociophonetics. WIREs Cognitive Science 12:3
Hallett, Jill
2020. Teachers’ development of a socially-stigmatized dialect. Language and Education 34:6 ► pp. 520 ff.
Gordon, Matthew J.
2019. Language Variation and Change in Rural Communities. Annual Review of Linguistics 5:1 ► pp. 435 ff.
Smith, Hiram L.
2019. Has nigga Been Reappropriated as a Term of Endearment?. American Speech 94:4 ► pp. 420 ff.
Winford, Donald
2019. Another Look at the Creolist Hypothesis of Aave Origins. In The Routledge Companion to the Work of John R. Rickford, ► pp. 64 ff.
Amira, Karyn, Christopher A. Cooper, H. Gibbs Knotts & Claire Wofford
2018. The Southern Accent as a Heuristic in American Campaigns and Elections. American Politics Research 46:6 ► pp. 1065 ff.
Aslan, Erhan & Camilla Vásquez
2018. ‘Cash me ousside’: A citizen sociolinguistic analysis of online metalinguistic commentary. Journal of Sociolinguistics 22:4 ► pp. 406 ff.
Brown, Tamara Mose & Erynn Masi de Casanova
2014. Representing the language of the ‘other’: African American Vernacular English in ethnography. Ethnography 15:2 ► pp. 208 ff.
King, Brian W.
2014. Tracing the emergence of a community of practice: Beyond presupposition in sociolinguistic research. Language in Society 43:1 ► pp. 61 ff.
Montgomery, Michael, Michael Ellis & Brandon Cooper
2012. Comparability of the Black-White Divide in the American Speech Community and the Coloured-White Divide in the Afrikaans Speech Community. American Speech 87:3 ► pp. 294 ff.
van Hofwegen, Janneke
2010. Apparent-time evolution of /l/ in one African American community. Language Variation and Change 22:3 ► pp. 373 ff.
Szpara, Michelle Y. & E. Caroline Wylie
2008. Writing Differences in Teacher Performance Assessments: An Investigation of African American Language and Edited American English. Applied Linguistics 29:2 ► pp. 244 ff.
Thomas, Erik R.
2007. Phonological and Phonetic Characteristics of African American Vernacular English. Language and Linguistics Compass 1:5 ► pp. 450 ff.
Weldon, Tracey L.
2007. GULLAH NEGATION: A VARIABLE ANALYSIS. American Speech 82:4 ► pp. 341 ff.
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2006. The clinical utility of nonword repetition for children living in the rural south of the US. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 20:7-8 ► pp. 553 ff.
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2006. Variation Within Dialects: A Case of Cajun/Creole Influence Within Child SAAE and SWE. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 49:1 ► pp. 16 ff.
CARPENTER, JEANNINE
2005. THE INVISIBLE COMMUNITY OF THE LOST COLONY: AFRICAN AMERICAN ENGLISH ON ROANOKE ISLAND. American Speech 80:3 ► pp. 227 ff.
Thomas, Erik R. & Jeffrey Reaser
2004. Delimiting perceptual cues used for the ethnic labeling of African American and European American voices. Journal of Sociolinguistics 8:1 ► pp. 54 ff.
DAVIS, STUART
2003. “IS THIS NEGROISH OR IRISH?” AFRICAN AMERICAN ENGLISH, THE ANTEBELLUM WRITINGS OF FRANCIS LIEBER, AND THE ORIGINS CONTROVERSY. American Speech 78:3 ► pp. 285 ff.
DUBOIS, SYLVIE & BARBARA M. HORVATH
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Holm, John
2003. Languages in Contact,
Stephen J. Nagle & Sara L. Sanders
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WOLFRAM, WALT
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2007. Sociolinguistic Folklore in the Study of African American English. Language and Linguistics Compass 1:4 ► pp. 292 ff.
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[no author supplied]
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This list is based on CrossRef data as of 29 september 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.