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1
Considering Performance in the Automated and Manual Coding of Sociolinguistic Variables: Lessons From Variable (ING)
In: Front Artif Intell (2021)
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2
The Great Migration and the Spread of a Supraregional Variant: Glottal Stop Replacement of Word Final /d/ in DC African American Language
In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2020)
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3
The relationship between segregation and participation in ethnolectal variants: A longitudinal study
In: Acquiring sociolinguistic variation (2017), S. 185-212
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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4
Twentieth Century Sound Change in Washington DC African American English
In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2017)
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5
Perhaps we used to, but we don’t anymore: The Habitual Past in Oregonian English
In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2014)
Abstract: From a dialectological perspective, the Pacific Northwest has been massively understudied in comparison to other areas of the U.S. Recent years have seen a growing attention to expanding our knowledge of regional dialects in this part of the country, with a number of research projects and publications beginning to address speech and variation within the Pacific Northwest. However, the vast bulk of this recent work has focused on the (socio)phonetics of the region and very little recent work has examined regional variation in morphosyntax in the Pacific Northwest. Motivated by work in York, England by Tagliamonte and Lawrence (2000, “I used to dance, but I don’t dance now: The habitual past in English,” Journal of English Linguistics 28.4), the present study examines variability in the realization of past habituality in Oregonian English. Unlike previous studies, we find extremely low rates of the form used to relative to would and preterit forms. We explore the internal and external constraints that influence the realization of these forms, and, more broadly, consider possible reasons that account for these rates of use.
URL: https://repository.upenn.edu/pwpl/vol20/iss2/13
https://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1818&context=pwpl
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6
A Tale of Two Cities: Community Density and African American English Vowels
In: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (2013)
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