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Research Article February 12 2024
Variation in African American English Verbal Morphology Following Ain’t in the Past and Present Perfect
Research Article February 12 2024
The Representation of Earlier African American Vernacular English by Charles W. Chesnutt
Research Article February 12 2024
Vowel Pronunciation as an Ethnic Marker: Pacific Islander Teens in Salt Lake County, Utah
Research Article October 18 2023
When PALMs are in your THOUGHTs, you head south: Evidence for diffusion of the low-back vowel system from New York to New Orleans
Research Article October 18 2023
Acoustic cues and obstruent devoicing in Minnesotan English
Research Article October 18 2023
What Goes Around: Language Change and Glottalization in Vermont
Research Article October 18 2023
Laughing at Ourselves: Professor Schnitzel and Pennsylvania German Humor
Research Article October 18 2023
The English Prosodic Rhythm of African- and Haitian-Americans in South Florida
Research Article October 18 2023
You ain’t from here, are you?: Subregional Variation and Identification in the New Appalachia
Research Article October 18 2023
Race, place, and education: Charting the wine-whine merger in the US South
Research Article October 18 2023
Complex Variation in the Construction of a Sociolinguistic Persona: The Case of Vice President Kamala Harris
Research Article October 18 2023
The Politics of Prescriptivism: One Style Manual, One Century
Research Article August 3 2022
Zero Relative in African American English: The role of resumption and left dislocation
Research Article August 3 2022
Mapping perceptions diachronically: A restudy of mental maps in Michigan
Research Article August 3 2022
Orderly obsolescence: The decline of /hw/ in Ontario
Research Article March 26 2022
Naturalistic Double Modals in North America
Research Article March 24 2021
The Complex History of Have Gotten in American English
Research Article September 17 2020
Bless your heart: Constructing the ‘Southern Belle’ in the modern South’
Research Article June 21 2020
A Modern Update on New England Dialectology: Introducing the Dartmouth New England English Database (DNEED)
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