Table of contents
Editors’ preface: The evolution of Englishes: In honour of Edgar Schneider on the occasion of his 60th birthday
Part I: The Dynamic Model
Convergence and endonormativity at Phase Four of the Dynamic Model
The identity issue in bi- and multilingual repertoires in South Africa: Implications for Schneider’s Dynamic Model
The sociophonetic effects of Event X: Post-apartheid Black South African English in multicultural contact with other South African Englishes
Beyond Nativization? Philippine English in Schneider's Dynamic Model
Stylistic and sociolinguistic variation in Schneider’s Nativization Phase: T-affrication and relativization in Ghanaian English
Differentiation in Australian English
The Evolution of Singlish: Beyond Phase 5?
Emergence of “new varieties” in speech as a complex system
The cognitive evolution of Englishes: The role of constructions in the dynamic model
English in Cyprus and Namibia: A critical approach to taxonomies and models of World Englishes and Second Language Acquisition research
English in Germany: Retreating exonormative orientation and incipient nativization
Part II: Beyond the Dynamic Model - Empirical and theoretical perspectives on World Englishes
Focus 1: Contributions with a theoretical focus
On cafeterias and new dialects: The role of primary transmitters
Does money talk, and do languages have price tags? Economic perspectives on English as a global language
Language variation and education: A focus on Pakistan
The evolution of English(es): Notes on the history of an idea
Focus 2: Cross-varietal contributions
At the crossroads of variation studies and corpus linguistics: The analysis of past tense and past participle forms
Compounding and Suffixation in World Englishes
Focus 3: United States
When did Southern American English really begin? Testing Bailey’s Hypothesis
The English origins of African American Vernacular English: What Edgar W. Schneider has taught us
Innovation in pre-World War II AAVE? Evidence from BLUR
Focus 4: Asia and Africa
Non-standard or new standards or errors? The use of inflectional marking for present and past tenses in English as an Asian lingua franca
Yesterday’s founder population, today’s Englishes: The role of the Peranakans in the (continuing) evolution of Singapore English
The evolution of Brunei English: How it is contributing to the development of English in the world
The evolutionary trajectory of Cameroonian Creole and its varying sociolinguistic statuses
Focus 5: Old varieties, new perspectives
Lexical creativity reconsidered: GUI, cyborg, cred, pay-per-view, techno and cyber-
The language of butchery, the UK’s last public craft
A New Old English? The chances of an Anglo-Saxon revival on the Internet
Name index
Subject index
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