Penn Working Papers in Linguistics
Volume 13.2 (2007)
Papers from NWAV 35
Edited by Toni Cook and Keelan Evanini
The print version of this volume costs $15 US, pre-paid. Please see our ordering instructions to order a copy.
All articles in this volume are available online.
Contents
- Cambridge University Press Prize for Best Student Paper
Phillip Carter. Phonetic variation and speaker agency: Mexicana identity in a North Carolina middle school. (pp. 1-14)
- Charles A. Ferguson Prize for Best Student Poster
Tyler Kendall. Enhancing sociolinguistic data collections: The North Carolina Sociolinguistic Archive and Analysis Project. (pp. 15-26)
- Łukasz Abramowicz. Sociolinguistics meets Exemplar Theory: Frequency and recency effects in (ing). (pp. 27-38)
- Marlyse Baptista. Selection and competition in Creole formation: A case study. (pp. 39-50)
- Sylvie Dubois, Emilie Leumas, and Malcom Richardson. Spatial diffusion of language practices within the Catholic Church in Louisiana. (pp. 51-64)
- David Durian. Getting [ʃ]tronger every day?: More on urbanization and the socio-geographic diffusion of (str) in Columbus, OH. (pp. 65-80)
- Shelome Gooden and Maeve Eberhardt. Local identity and ethnicity in Pittsburgh AAVE. (pp. 81-94)
- Lisa Green, Toya A. Wyatt, and Qiuana Lopez. Event arguments and 'Be' in child African American English. (pp. 95-108)
- Gregory R. Guy. Lexical exceptions in variable phonology. (pp. 109-120)
- Terry Lynn Irons. On the Southern Shift in Appalachian English. (pp. 121-134)
- Patricia Irwin and Naomi Nagy. Bostonians /r/ speaking: A quantitative look at (R) in Boston. (pp. 135-148)
- Christine Mallinson. Social class, social status and stratification: Revisiting familiar concepts in sociolinguistics. (pp. 149-164)
- Gregory Newall. The loss of the 'voseo' in Chilean Spanish: Evidence in literature. (pp. 165-178)
- Jeffrey Reaser. Evaluating and improving high school students' folk perceptions of dialects. (pp. 179-192)
- Erik R. Thomas and Holly A. Ericson. Intonational distinctiveness of Mexican American English. (pp. 193-206)
- Alina Twist, Adam Baker, Jeff Mielke, and Diana Archangeli. Are "covert" /ɹ/ allophones really indistinguishable? (pp. 207-216)
- Amy Wong. Two vernacular features in the English of four American-born Chinese. (pp. 217-230)
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