Series editor's preface |
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ix | |
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Editors' preface |
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xi | |
The evolution of Englishes: The Dynamic Model and beyond |
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1 | (20) |
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Convergence and endonormativity at Phase 4 of the Dynamic Model |
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21 | (18) |
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The identity issue in bi- and multilingual repertoires in South Africa: Implications for Schneider's Dynamic Model |
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39 | (19) |
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The sociophonetic effects of `Event X': Post-apartheid Black South African English in multicultural contact with other South African Englishes |
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58 | (12) |
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Beyond Nativization? Philippine English in Schneider's Dynamic Model |
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70 | (16) |
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Stylistic and sociolinguistic variation in Schneider's Nativization Phase: T-affrication and relativization in Ghanaian English |
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86 | (21) |
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Differentiation in Australian English |
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107 | (19) |
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The evolution of Singlish in late modernity: Beyond Phase 5? |
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126 | (16) |
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Emergence of "New Varieties" in speech as a complex system |
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142 | (18) |
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William A. Kretzschmar, Jr. |
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The cognitive evolution of Englishes: The role of constructions in the Dynamic Model |
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160 | (21) |
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English in Cyprus and Namibia: A critical approach to taxonomies and models of World Englishes and Second Language Acquisition research |
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181 | (22) |
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English in Germany: Spreading bilingualism, retreating exonormative orientation and incipient nativization? |
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203 | (28) |
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Part II Beyond the Dynamic Model: Empirical and theoretical perspectives on World Englishes |
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Focus 1 Contributions With A Theoretical Focus |
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On cafeterias and new dialects: The role of primary transmitters |
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231 | (18) |
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Does money talk, and do languages have price tags? Economic perspectives on English as a global language |
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249 | (18) |
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Language variation and education: A focus on Pakistan |
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267 | (15) |
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The evolution of English(es): Notes on the history of an idea |
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282 | (19) |
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Focus 2 Cross-Varietal Contributions |
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At the crossroads of variation studies and corpus linguistics: The analysis of past tense and past participle forms |
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301 | (11) |
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Compounding and suffixation in World Englishes |
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312 | (19) |
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When did Southern American English really begin? Testing Bailey's hypothesis |
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331 | (18) |
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The English origins of African American Vernacular English: What Edgar W. Schneider has taught us |
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349 | (16) |
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Innovation in pre-World War II African American Vernacular English? Evidence from BLUR |
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365 | (21) |
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Non-standard or new standards or errors? The use of inflectional marking for present and past tenses in English as an Asian lingua franca |
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386 | (15) |
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Yesterday's founder population, today's Englishes: The role of the Peranakans in the (continuing) evolution of Singapore English |
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401 | (19) |
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The evolution of Brunei English: How it is contributing to the development of English in the world |
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420 | (14) |
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The evolutionary trajectory of Cameroonian Creole and its varying sociolinguistic statuses |
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434 | (14) |
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Focus 5 Old Varieties, New Perspectives |
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Lexical institutionalization reconsidered: GUI, cyborg cred, pay-per-view, techno- and cyber- |
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448 | (22) |
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The language of butchery, the UK's last public craft |
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470 | (16) |
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A new Old English? The chances of an Anglo-Saxon revival on the Internet |
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486 | (19) |
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Name Index |
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505 | (2) |
Subject Index |
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507 | |