All Stories

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