All Stories

  1. Responses to CAT at 50: Reflections on accommodation from a sociolinguist
  2. Focussing and Levelling in the Auckland Voices Project
  3. Humour and the stretchy temporality of peer conflict in a group early childhood setting: An analysis of relational power
  4. ‘I'm a big boy, you're a baby’: Negotiating labels, group boundaries and identities in an early childhood community of practice
  5. Complementation and the creole continuum in the Eastern Caribbean
  6. Aesthetics in Styles and Variation: A Fresh Flavor
  7. Do different linguistic features pattern together?
  8. Baby steps in decolonising linguistics
  9. ‘I’m a big boy, you’re a baby’. Negotiating labels, group boundaries and identities in an early childhood community of practice
  10. Sound and grammar features in three communities in Auckland, NZ.
  11. How best to assess similarity and difference between closely related varieties?
  12. Special issue Variation in the Pacific
  13. Variation in the Pacific
  14. Styles, standards and meaning
  15. Styles, Standards and Meaning in Lesser-Studied Languages
  16. Introduction
  17. Special issue Variation in the Pacific
  18. Variation in the Pacific
  19. New voices and perspectives on pidgins and creoles
  20. A trajectory of belonging: negotiating conflict and identity in an early childhood centre
  21. Negotiating wellbeing and belonging in an early childhood centre: What children’s conflicts can teach us
  22. Pivots of the Caribbean? Low-back vowels in eastern Caribbean English
  23. Order in the creole speech community
  24. Language variation and language documentation can be studied together.
  25. In pursuit of social meaning
  26. Language, Gender, and Sexuality
  27. Writing a linguistic symphony: Analyzing variation while doing language documentation
  28. Extending ELAN into variationist sociolinguistics
  29. Turning variation on its head
  30. Globalising Sociolinguistics
  31. Bequia English
  32. An end of egalitarianism? Social evaluations of language difference in New Zealand
  33. Significant or random?
  34. An existential problem: The sociolinguistic monitor and variation in existential constructions on Bequia (St. Vincent and the Grenadines)
  35. Grammatical variation in Bequia (St Vincent and the Grenadines)
  36. Variation, contact and social indexicality in the acquisition of (ing) by teenage migrants1
  37. Sociolinguistic Fieldwork
  38. Teenagers’ acquisition of variation
  39. Replication, transfer, and calquing: Using variation as a tool in the study of language contact
  40. Review of Kortmann & Upton (2008): Varieties of English. 1, The British Isles
  41. Forging Pacific Pidgin and Creole Syntax: Substrate, Discourse, and Inherent Variability
  42. Social Lives in Language – Sociolinguistics and multilingual speech communities
  43. The persistence of variation in individual grammars: Copula absence in ‘urban sojourners’ and their stay‐at‐home peers, Bequia (St Vincent and the Grenadines)1
  44. Forty years of language change on Martha's Vineyard
  45. ZERO COPULA IN THE EASTERN CARIBBEAN: EVIDENCE FROM BEQUIA
  46. Review of Crowley (2002): Serial verbs in Oceanic: A descriptive typology
  47. Claiming a Place: Gender, Knowledge, and Authority as Emergent Properties
  48. Different Voices, Different Views: An Introduction to Current Research in Language and Gender
  49. The Handbook of Language and Gender
  50. A Vanishing Act: Tonkinese Migrant Labour in Vanuatu in the Early 20th Century
  51. Resistance to creolization: An interpersonal and intergroup account
  52. Lexical Shift in Working Class New Zealnd English