Introduction. The Canadian Vowel Shift (CS), generally described as a systematic lowering and backing of the front lax vowels (/ɪ, ɛ, æ/; as in KIT, DRESS, and TRAP), has been investigated b
b) Speakers of Canadian English in their social contexts c) Sociolinguistic variation and change ove...
In this paper we present the results of a trend analysis comparing acoustic vowel data collected fro...
This paper examines the perception of the low front vowel /ae/ which has been found to be more centr...
This study provides the first wide-scale, apparent time, instrumental description of the Canadian Sh...
This paper examines two current sound changes in Canadian English (CE): the Canadian Shift (CS) and ...
Previous literature on the Canadian Shift describes this phenomenon as a change in progress in many ...
This study provides the first wide-scale, apparent time, instrumental description of the Canadian Sh...
This paper examines two current sound changes in Canadian English (CE): the Canadian Shift (CS) and ...
Previous accounts of the Canadian Shift, which have interpreted this diachronic process as a purely ...
Previous accounts of the Canadian Shift, which have interpreted this diachronic process as a purely ...
This paper continues the investigation of earlier work done on lax vowel lowering as part of a chang...
In this paper, I address the apparent homogeneity of Canadian English (cf. Chambers, 1998) through a...
This study examines the linguistic and regional variation of the low, unrounded vowel, referred to h...
From a continental perspective, Canadian English exhibits two remarkable phonetic patterns. Canadian...
The variety of middle-class speakers in St. John’s conforms to some degree to mainland Canadian-Engl...
b) Speakers of Canadian English in their social contexts c) Sociolinguistic variation and change ove...
In this paper we present the results of a trend analysis comparing acoustic vowel data collected fro...
This paper examines the perception of the low front vowel /ae/ which has been found to be more centr...
This study provides the first wide-scale, apparent time, instrumental description of the Canadian Sh...
This paper examines two current sound changes in Canadian English (CE): the Canadian Shift (CS) and ...
Previous literature on the Canadian Shift describes this phenomenon as a change in progress in many ...
This study provides the first wide-scale, apparent time, instrumental description of the Canadian Sh...
This paper examines two current sound changes in Canadian English (CE): the Canadian Shift (CS) and ...
Previous accounts of the Canadian Shift, which have interpreted this diachronic process as a purely ...
Previous accounts of the Canadian Shift, which have interpreted this diachronic process as a purely ...
This paper continues the investigation of earlier work done on lax vowel lowering as part of a chang...
In this paper, I address the apparent homogeneity of Canadian English (cf. Chambers, 1998) through a...
This study examines the linguistic and regional variation of the low, unrounded vowel, referred to h...
From a continental perspective, Canadian English exhibits two remarkable phonetic patterns. Canadian...
The variety of middle-class speakers in St. John’s conforms to some degree to mainland Canadian-Engl...
b) Speakers of Canadian English in their social contexts c) Sociolinguistic variation and change ove...
In this paper we present the results of a trend analysis comparing acoustic vowel data collected fro...
This paper examines the perception of the low front vowel /ae/ which has been found to be more centr...