Elizabeth Gordon, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea Sudbury & Peter Trudgill (2004). New Zealand English. Its Origins and Evolution

Authors

  • Isabel Moskowich-Spiegel Fandiño Universidade da Coruña Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/sols.v6i2.282

Keywords:

New Zealand English

Abstract

Elizabeth Gordon, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea Sudbury & Peter Trudgill (2004). New Zealand English. Its Origins and Evolution (= Studies in English Language). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 370. ISBN 0-521-642-922.

References

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Gimson, A.C. (1982). An Introduction to the Pronunciation of English. London: Arnold.

Harrington, J. et al. (2000). “Does the Queen speak the Queen’s English?”. Nature 408, 927.

Hawkins, P.R. (1973). “The sound-patterns of New Zealand English”. Proceedings and Papers of the 15th Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association Conference, vol. 13. Sydney: AULLA, 1-8.

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Nevalainen, T. & H. Raumolin-Brunberg (1989). “A corpus of Early Modern Standard English in a socio-historical perspective”. Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 90(1), 67-110.

Roach, P. (1983). English Phonetics and Phonology: A Practical Course. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Sankoff, G. et al. (2001). “Individual roles in a real-time change: Montreal (r>R) 1947-1995”. Études et Travaux 4, 141-57.

Trudgill, P. (1986). Dialects in Contact. Oxford: Blackwell.

Trudgill, P. et al. (2000). “Determinism in new-dialect formation and the genesis of New Zealand English”. Journal of Linguistics 36(2), 299-318.

Wells, J.C. (1982). Accents of English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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Published

2005-06-26

How to Cite

Fandiño, I. M.-S. (2005). Elizabeth Gordon, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea Sudbury & Peter Trudgill (2004). New Zealand English. Its Origins and Evolution. Sociolinguistic Studies, 6(2), 282-287. https://doi.org/10.1558/sols.v6i2.282

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