This article presents a sociolinguistic investigation of a rapidly expanding innovation in the UK, glottal replacement, in a variety spoken in northeast Scotland. Quantitative analysis of the form shows a dramatic change in apparent time: from a minority variant in the older generation to a full 90 per cent use in the younger generation. Further analysis of the constraints on use provide a detailed snapshot of how this variant moves through social and linguistic space. Males use higher rates of the non-standard form in the older generations but this constraint is neutralised in the younger generations as the form increases. Styleshifting according to interlocutor also neutralises through time. While these results across the social constrain...
This paper studies the longitudinal development of a vowel timing alternation known as the “Scottish...
This research paper examines how language change can occur across the lifespan through the linguisti...
This article investigates the speech of adolescents who have moved directly from Poland to Glasgow, ...
This paper presents a sociolinguistic investigation of a rapidly expanding innovation in the UK, glo...
This research examines the production of glottal replacement i.e., /t/-glottaling in the speech of E...
Recent sociolinguistic research suggests that the previously-stigmatised glottal replacement of /t/ ...
Docherty et alii have "noted that several sociolinguistic accounts have shown a sharp distinction be...
This paper analyses the speech of Edinburgh speakers from a range of ages and socioeconomic backgrou...
The paper is concerned with t-glottalization in North American and British accents. The possible sou...
Docherty et alii have noted that several sociolinguistic accounts have shown a sharp distinction bet...
The glottal stop, previously labelled as a heavily stigmatized feature of British English pronunciat...
The present study is a sociophonetic account of variation and change in glottal variants of /t/ in i...
problem of its origin (1972). The main difficulty is that 'neither in RP, nor in the dialects c...
This article considers dialect contact and second-dialect acquisition by adult and child Barbadian E...
Despite the social perception that Vermont’s rural dialect is dying, /t/ glottalization is a robust ...
This paper studies the longitudinal development of a vowel timing alternation known as the “Scottish...
This research paper examines how language change can occur across the lifespan through the linguisti...
This article investigates the speech of adolescents who have moved directly from Poland to Glasgow, ...
This paper presents a sociolinguistic investigation of a rapidly expanding innovation in the UK, glo...
This research examines the production of glottal replacement i.e., /t/-glottaling in the speech of E...
Recent sociolinguistic research suggests that the previously-stigmatised glottal replacement of /t/ ...
Docherty et alii have "noted that several sociolinguistic accounts have shown a sharp distinction be...
This paper analyses the speech of Edinburgh speakers from a range of ages and socioeconomic backgrou...
The paper is concerned with t-glottalization in North American and British accents. The possible sou...
Docherty et alii have noted that several sociolinguistic accounts have shown a sharp distinction bet...
The glottal stop, previously labelled as a heavily stigmatized feature of British English pronunciat...
The present study is a sociophonetic account of variation and change in glottal variants of /t/ in i...
problem of its origin (1972). The main difficulty is that 'neither in RP, nor in the dialects c...
This article considers dialect contact and second-dialect acquisition by adult and child Barbadian E...
Despite the social perception that Vermont’s rural dialect is dying, /t/ glottalization is a robust ...
This paper studies the longitudinal development of a vowel timing alternation known as the “Scottish...
This research paper examines how language change can occur across the lifespan through the linguisti...
This article investigates the speech of adolescents who have moved directly from Poland to Glasgow, ...