[lg policy] Linguist List Issue: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics Vol. 20, No. 2 (2014)
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Message1: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics Vol. 20, No. 2 (2014)
Date:02-Oct-2014
From:Working Papers working-papers at babel.ling.upenn.edu
LINGUIST List issue http://linguistlist.org/issues/25/25-3886.html
Publisher: Penn Linguistics Club
http://www.ling.upenn.edu/papers/pwpl.html
Journal Title: University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics
Volume Number: 20
Issue Number: 2
Issue Date: 2014
Subtitle: Selected papers from NWAV 42
Main Text:
The Penn Linguistics Club is proud to announce the publication of U. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics 20.2: Selected Papers from NWAV 42. All back issues of PWPL are now available online.
The issue can be accessed for free at: http://repository.upenn.edu/pwpl/vol20/iss2/
Comparative Complementizers in Canadian English: Insights from Early Fiction
Marisa Brook
Dimensions of Rhythm: the multi-layered nature of rhythmic style
Jeremy Calder and Daria Popova
Apparent time and network effects on long-term cross-dialect accommodation among college students
Kathryn Campbell-Kibler, Abby Walker, Shontael Elward, and Katie Carmichael
Reanalysis and Hypercorrection Among Extreme /s/ Reducers
Whitney Chappell
Network Embeddedness and the Retreat from Southern Vowels in Raleigh
Robin Dodsworth
"He Didn'(t) Give Up When Things Got Har(d)": Examining Barack and Michelle Obama's Rates of Coronal Stop Deletion
Nicole R. Holliday
Variation in Fricative Production in Malagasy Dialects
Penelope Howe
The (North) American English Mandative Subjunctive in the 21st Century: Revival or Remnant?
Laura Kastronic and Shana Poplack
Iconization and the Timing of Southern Vowels: A Case Study of /�/
Christian Koops
Vowel Change across Noam Chomsky's Lifespan
Soohyun Kwon
A mimicry study of adaptation towards socially-salient tongue shape variants
Eleanor Lawson, Jane Stuart-Smith, and James M. Scobbie
Perhaps we used to, but we don't anymore: The Habitual Past in Oregonian English
Jason McLarty, Charlie Farrington, and Tyler Kendall
Borrowing in Apparent Time: With some comments on attitudes and universals
Miriam Meyerhoff
How Conservatism and Normative Gender Constrain Variation in Inland California: The Case of /s/
Robert J. Podesva and Janneke Van Hofwegen
Ethnolectal and generational differences in vowel trajectories: Evidence from African American English and the Southern Vowel System
Megan L. Risdal and Mary E. Kohn
Ginsburg v. Ginsburg: A Longitudinal Study of Regional Features in a Supreme Court Justice's Speech
Allison Shapp, Nathan LaFave, and John Victor Singler
Speaking English in Spanish Harlem: The Role of Rhythm
Cara Shousterman
Antagonistic Contact and Inverse Affiliation: Appropriation of /TH/-fronting by White Speakers in South Philadelphia
Betsy Sneller
Social Differences in the Processing of Grammatical Variation
Lauren Squires
Some /l/s are darker than others: Accounting for variation in English /l/ with ultrasound tongue imaging
Danielle Turton
On the (In)Significance of English Language Variation: Cherokee English and Lumbee English in Comparative Perspective
Walt Wolfram, Jaclyn Daugherty, and Danica Cullinan
GOOSE-fronting among Chinese Americans in New York City
Amy Wing-mei Wong
Issue editor Duna Gylfadottir
Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics
Morphology
Phonetics
Sociolinguistics
Text/Corpus Linguistics
General Linguistics
Subject Language(s): Bislama (bis)
Cherokee (chr)
English (eng)
Spanish (spa)
English, Old (ang)
Malagasy, Plateau (plt)
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