All Stories

  1. Diachrony and Diachronica
  2. He come out and give me a beer but he never seen the bear
  3. The bike, the back, and the boyfriend
  4. A Cool Comparison: Adjectives of Positive Evaluation in Toronto, Canada and York, England
  5. Supperordinner?
  6. ‘I don't come off as timid anymore’: Real-time change in early adulthood against the backdrop of the community
  7. Near done; awful stable; really changing
  8. Review of Szmrecsanyi (2013): Grammatical variation in British English dialects
  9. What Kind of Data is it? Situating Sociolinguistic Corpora in Context
  10. Natalie Schilling, Sociolinguistic fieldwork. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. Pp. xi, 313. Pb. $36.99.
  11. On the genitive's trail: data and method from a sociolinguistic perspective
  12. Situating media influence in sociolinguistic context
  13. Grammaticalization at an early stage: futurebe going toin conservative British dialects
  14. Expanding the transmission/diffusion dichotomy: Evidence from Canada
  15. Asymmetrical trajectories: The past and present of –body/–one
  16. Comparative Sociolinguistics
  17. Sociolinguistic typology: Social determinants of linguistic complexity by Peter Trudgill (review)
  18. Models, forests, and trees of York English: Was/were variation as a case study for statistical practice
  19. Roots of English
  20. Variation as a window on universals
  21. Prestige, accommodation, and the legacy of relative who
  22. Social work and linguistic systems: Marking possession in Canadian English
  23. Variation in the English definite article: Socio-historical linguistics in t'speech community1
  24. Peaks Beyond Phonology: Adolescence, Incrementation, and Language Change
  25. So different and pretty cool! Recycling intensifiers in Toronto, Canada
  26. Comparative Sociolinguistics
  27. How'd you get that accent?: Acquiring a second dialect of the same language
  28. Frequency and variation in the community grammar: Tracking a new change through the generations
  29. The modals of obligation/necessity in Canadian perspective
  30. Layering, competition and a twist of fate
  31. Analysing Sociolinguistic Variation
  32. ''So cool, right?'': Canadian English Entering the 21st Century
  33. So who? Like how? Just what?
  34. No momentary fancy! The zero ‘complementizer’ in English dialects
  35. New perspectives on an ol' variable: (t,d) in British English
  36. No taming the vernacular! Insights from the relatives in northern Britain
  37. He's like, she's like: The quotative system in Canadian youth
  38. From Somerset to Samaná: Preverbal did in the voyage of English
  39. Have to, gotta, must?
  40. Well weird, right dodgy, very strange, really cool: Layering and recycling in English intensifiers
  41. “Either it isn’t or it’s not”
  42. Think really different : Continuity and specialization in the English dual form adverbs
  43. The Story ofkomin Nigerian Pidgin English
  44. Review of Bayley & Preston (1996): Second language acquisition and linguistic variation
  45. The grammaticization of going to in (African American) English
  46. Be like et al. beyond America: The quotative system in British and Canadian youth
  47. Another piece for the verbal -s story: Evidence from Devon in southwest England
  48. Was/were variation across the generations: View from the city of York
  49. ‘We were all thegither . . . I think we was all thegither’: was regularization in Buckie English
  50. Plural Marking Patterns in Nigerian Pidgin English
  51. Obsolescence in the English Perfect? Evidence from Samana English
  52. -S or Nothing: Marking the Plural in the African-American Diaspora
  53. The Zero-Marked Verb
  54. African American English in the diaspora
  55. African American English in the diaspora: Evidence from old-line Nova Scotians
  56. There's no tense like the present: Verbal -s inflection in early Black English
  57. How Black English Past got to the present: Evidence from Samaná
  58. Quantitative analysis
  59. The Roots Archive
  60. 'Every place has a different toll': Determinants of grammatical variation in cross-variety perspective
  61. Analysing and interpreting variation in the sociolinguistic tradition*
  62. Historical Change in Synchronic Perspective: The Legacy of British Dialects
  63. System and society in the evolution of change: the view from Canada
  64. Dialects as a window on the past
  65. The legacy of British and Irish dialects
  66. The verb phrase in contemporary Canadian English