17.700, TOC: U. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics 10/2 (2005)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-17-700. Tue Mar 07 2006. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 17.700, TOC: U. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics 10/2 (2005)

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===========================Directory==============================  

1)
Date: 07-Mar-2006
From: Lukasz Abramowicz < lukasza at babel.ling.upenn.edu >
Subject: U. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics Vol 10, No 2 (2005) 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Tue, 07 Mar 2006 13:57:09
From: Lukasz Abramowicz < lukasza at babel.ling.upenn.edu >
Subject: U. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics Vol 10, No 2 (2005) 
 


Publisher:	Penn Linguistics Club
			 			
			
Journal Title:  U. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics 
Volume Number:  10 
Issue Number:  2 
Issue Date:  2005 


Main Text:  

University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics (PWPL)
ISSN 1524-9549
http://ling.upenn.edu/papers/pwpl.html


PWPL 10.2 (2005):  Papers from NWAVE 32

Issue Editors:  Keelan Evans and Giang Nguyen



Christine Mallinson and Becky Childs. Communities of practice in sociolinguistic
description: African American women's langugage in Appalachia. (pp. 1-14)

H. Samy Alim. 'You know my steez': The effects of race, gender, and Hip Hop
cultural knowledge on the speech styles of Black youth. (pp. 15-29)

Matt Bauer. Lenition of the flap in American English. (pp. 31-43)

Anne-Marie Brousseau. The sociolect of 17th-18th century French settlers:
Phonological clues from French Creoles. (pp. 45-60)

Isabelle Buchstaller. Putting perception to the reality test: The case of "go"
and "like". (pp. 61-76)

Nathalie Dion and Hélène Blondeau. Variability and future temporal reference:
The French of Anglo-Montrealers. (pp. 77-89)

Zsuzsanna Fagyal. Prosodic consequences of being a Beur: French in contact with
immigrant languages in Paris. (pp. 91-104)

Lauren Hall-Lew. One shift, two groups: When fronting alone is not enough. (pp.
105-116)

Junko Hibiya. /-t, d/ deletion in Japanese-Canadian English. (pp. 117-128)

Amel Kallel.The loss of negative concord and the constant rate hypothesis. (pp.
129-142)

Mikhail Kissine, Hans Van de Velde, and Roeland van Hout. Acoustic contributions
to sociolinguistics: Devoicing of /v/ and /z/ in Dutch. (pp. 143-155)

Laureen T. Lim and Gregory R. Guy. The limits of linguistic community: speech
styles and variable constraint effects. (pp. 157-170)

Natalia Mazzaro. Speaking Spanish with style: (s)-deletion in Argentine Spanish
and Labov's decision tree. (pp. 171-190)

Jennifer Nguyen. Transcription as methodology: Using transcription tasks to
assess language attitudes. (pp. 191-203)

Jennifer Nycz. Global faithfulness and choice of repair. (pp. 205-218)

Natalie Schilling-Estes. Language change in apparent and real time: The
community and the individual. (pp. 219-232)

Zhiyi Song. A comparative study of subject pro-drop in Old Chinese and Modern
Chinese. (pp. 233-242)

Augustin Speyer. Topicalization in English and the trochaic requirement. (pp.
243-256)

Sali Tagliamonte and Alex D'Arcy. When people say, "I was like...": The
quotative system in Canadian youth. (pp. 257-272)

Anthony Warner. The sociolinguistics of DO NOT in the 16th and 17th century.
(pp. 273-286)



TO ORDER A COPY, PLEASE GO TO

http://ling.upenn.edu/papers/pwpl.html 


Linguistic Field(s): Phonology
                     Sociolinguistics
                     Syntax
                     General Linguistics
                     Phonetics

Subject Language(s): Chinese, Mandarin (cmn)
                     Dutch (nld)
                     English (eng)
                     French (fra)
                     Spanish (spa)




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