All Stories

  1. A Welcome and a Thank You
  2. Ethics in Linguistics
  3. Reflections From Editors of Journal of English Linguistics
  4. Review of Davydova (2019): Quotation in Indigenised and Learner English: A Sociolinguistic Account of Variation
  5. American Speech, Settler Colonialism, and a View from a Place Currently Called Canada
  6. Peer review in linguistics journals: Best practices and emerging standards
  7. Peer review in linguistics journals: Best practices and emerging standards: Supplementary material
  8. Review of Orality in Written Texts: Using Historical Corpora to Investigate Irish English 1700–1900
  9. Deriving Homogeneity in a Settler Colonial Variety of English
  10. Deconstructing variation in pragmatic function: A transdisciplinary case study
  11. Joining the Western Region: Sociophonetic Shift in Victoria
  12. Settler Colonial Englishes Are Distinct from Postcolonial Englishes
  13. Discourse-pragmatic Variation in Context
  14. Review of Dossena (2015): Transatlantic Perspectives on Late Modern English
  15. Outliers, impact, and rationalization in linguistic change
  16. Stability, stasis and change
  17. Not always variable: Probing the vernacular grammar
  18. At the crossroads of change
  19. Quotation and Advances in Understanding Syntactic Systems
  20. Functional Partitioning and Possible Limits on Variability
  21. Proceedings of Methods XIV
  22. Asymmetrical trajectories: The past and present of –body/–one
  23. The diachrony of quotation: Evidence from New Zealand English
  24. Ethics and social media: Implications for sociolinguistics in the networked public1
  25. Review of Walker (2010): Variation in Linguistic Systems
  26. Review of Clarke (2010): Newfoundland and Labrador English
  27. Prestige, accommodation, and the legacy of relative who
  28. Social work and linguistic systems: Marking possession in Canadian English
  29. Quoting ethnicity: Constructing dialogue in Aotearoa/New Zealand 1
  30. Review of Dollinger (2008): New-Dialect Formation in Canada. Evidence from the English Modal Auxiliaries
  31. Localized globalization: A multi-local, multivariate investigation of quotativebe like1
  32. Peaks Beyond Phonology: Adolescence, Incrementation, and Language Change
  33. LIKE AND LANGUAGE IDEOLOGY: DISENTANGLING FACT FROM FICTION
  34. Frequency and variation in the community grammar: Tracking a new change through the generations
  35. The modals of obligation/necessity in Canadian perspective
  36. LEXICAL REPLACEMENT AND THE LIKE(S)
  37. The development of linguistic constraints: Phonological innovations in St. John's English
  38. Contextualizing St. John's Youth English within the Canadian Quotative System
  39. He's like, she's like: The quotative system in Canadian youth
  40. Corpora: capturing language in use
  41. Discourse