This study presents a diachronic analysis of the language ruled to be unparliamentary in the New Zealand Parliament from 1890 to 1950. While unparliamentary language is sometimes referred to as ‘parliamentary insults’ (Ilie, 2001), this study has a wider definition: the language used in a legislative chamber is unparliamentary when it is ruled or signalled by the Speaker as out of order or likely to cause disorder. The user is required to articulate a statement of withdrawal and apology or risk further censure. The analysis uses the Communities of Practice theoretical framework, developed by Wenger (1998) and enhanced with linguistic impoliteness, as defined by Mills (2005) in order to contextualise the use of unparliamentary language withi...
“Colloquialization,” and anti-colloquial effects such as “densification,” have been shown to shape r...
New Zealand English first emerged at the beginning of the 19th century as a result of the dialect co...
This is a study of the lexical effects on New Zealand English of the legal, social and economic chan...
This study presents a diachronic analysis of the language ruled to be unparliamentary in the New Zea...
This dataset is information taken from a Microsoft Access database developed and used to manage 2592...
In this paper, we explore how sociocultural changes were reflected in the parliamentary record, a ge...
The question of parliamentary standards and parliamentarians’ performances wells up from time to tim...
© This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license https://creativecommon...
This paper combines a quantitative and qualitative analysis of a diachronic corpus of New Zealand ne...
Legislative language is a crucial, yet somewhat overlooked element of British politics. So how has t...
Māori loanwords are uncontestably the most notable feature of New Zealand English (Gordon, 2005; Ma...
As the 21st century advances, the Māori language (te reo Māori) has remained the primary language of...
New Zealand English first emerged at the beginning of the 19th century as a result of the dialect co...
This chronology outlines key events and dates since the early 19th century relating to the Māori lan...
New Zealand is a bicultural country, with, some say, an obligation to recognise the language of the...
“Colloquialization,” and anti-colloquial effects such as “densification,” have been shown to shape r...
New Zealand English first emerged at the beginning of the 19th century as a result of the dialect co...
This is a study of the lexical effects on New Zealand English of the legal, social and economic chan...
This study presents a diachronic analysis of the language ruled to be unparliamentary in the New Zea...
This dataset is information taken from a Microsoft Access database developed and used to manage 2592...
In this paper, we explore how sociocultural changes were reflected in the parliamentary record, a ge...
The question of parliamentary standards and parliamentarians’ performances wells up from time to tim...
© This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license https://creativecommon...
This paper combines a quantitative and qualitative analysis of a diachronic corpus of New Zealand ne...
Legislative language is a crucial, yet somewhat overlooked element of British politics. So how has t...
Māori loanwords are uncontestably the most notable feature of New Zealand English (Gordon, 2005; Ma...
As the 21st century advances, the Māori language (te reo Māori) has remained the primary language of...
New Zealand English first emerged at the beginning of the 19th century as a result of the dialect co...
This chronology outlines key events and dates since the early 19th century relating to the Māori lan...
New Zealand is a bicultural country, with, some say, an obligation to recognise the language of the...
“Colloquialization,” and anti-colloquial effects such as “densification,” have been shown to shape r...
New Zealand English first emerged at the beginning of the 19th century as a result of the dialect co...
This is a study of the lexical effects on New Zealand English of the legal, social and economic chan...