This paper uses a least-square regression method that relates per-capita income to four phonetic characteristics (r-dropping, and the so-called "father-bother", "cot-caught" and "pin-pen" mergers), to study the socio-economic significance of those characteristics in North American English. As a result we find a positive and statistically significant relationship between per-capita income and r-dropping, and between per-capita income and the presence of the "cot-caught" merger, and a negative and statistically significant relationship between per-capita income and the "pin-pen" merger. No statistically significant relationship is found, however, between per-capita income and the presence of a "father-bother" merger or split.
The purpose of this article is to present variation in American English pronunciation with respect t...
This study explores synchronic and diachronic aspects of English phonetics and phonology by applying...
The main purpose of this article is to understand better the phonology of a region/socioeconomic var...
This paper uses a least-square regression method that relates per-capita income to four phonetic cha...
This paper tries to quantify the socioeconomic importance of seven phonetic characteristics (seseo, ...
Evidence shows individual variation in lexical acquisition as a function of socioeconomic status and...
The socioeconomic background of people and how they use standard forms of language are not independe...
This study is a reanalysis of the external predictors of the use of negative concord in Philadelphia...
This paper examines the economic consequences of bilingualism. Specifically, we explore whether the ...
This study asks whether and how the features that define a language variety co-vary within the commu...
This paper analyzes employment and earnings differentials between Spanish speakers and English speak...
This paper uses pooled cross-sectional data from the General Social Survey to analyze the economic r...
The main purpose of this article is to understand better the phonology of a region/soci...
This paper analyzes employment and earnings differentials between Spanish speakers and English speak...
This dissertation focuses on the phonetic demerger of the traditional dialectal feature of ceceo, [s...
The purpose of this article is to present variation in American English pronunciation with respect t...
This study explores synchronic and diachronic aspects of English phonetics and phonology by applying...
The main purpose of this article is to understand better the phonology of a region/socioeconomic var...
This paper uses a least-square regression method that relates per-capita income to four phonetic cha...
This paper tries to quantify the socioeconomic importance of seven phonetic characteristics (seseo, ...
Evidence shows individual variation in lexical acquisition as a function of socioeconomic status and...
The socioeconomic background of people and how they use standard forms of language are not independe...
This study is a reanalysis of the external predictors of the use of negative concord in Philadelphia...
This paper examines the economic consequences of bilingualism. Specifically, we explore whether the ...
This study asks whether and how the features that define a language variety co-vary within the commu...
This paper analyzes employment and earnings differentials between Spanish speakers and English speak...
This paper uses pooled cross-sectional data from the General Social Survey to analyze the economic r...
The main purpose of this article is to understand better the phonology of a region/soci...
This paper analyzes employment and earnings differentials between Spanish speakers and English speak...
This dissertation focuses on the phonetic demerger of the traditional dialectal feature of ceceo, [s...
The purpose of this article is to present variation in American English pronunciation with respect t...
This study explores synchronic and diachronic aspects of English phonetics and phonology by applying...
The main purpose of this article is to understand better the phonology of a region/socioeconomic var...