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EDITOR'S NOTE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2006

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This is the first issue of Language in Society to go to press under my editorship, though most of the contents of this issue were edited by Jane Hill. I would like to thank Professor Hill for making the editorial transition as smooth as it has been. She has been ready to help and advise at a moment's notice. Readers of the journal, too, owe Professor Hill an enormous debt of gratitude for her work as editor. I hope that Language in Society will continue to be as interesting and up to date during my tenure, but Jane Hill will be a hard act to follow.

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EDITOR'S NOTE
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© 2006 Cambridge University Press

This is the first issue of Language in Society to go to press under my editorship, though most of the contents of this issue were edited by Jane Hill. I would like to thank Professor Hill for making the editorial transition as smooth as it has been. She has been ready to help and advise at a moment's notice. Readers of the journal, too, owe Professor Hill an enormous debt of gratitude for her work as editor. I hope that Language in Society will continue to be as interesting and up to date during my tenure, but Jane Hill will be a hard act to follow.

I would also like to thank the members of the Editorial Board whose terms ended at the end of 2004: Nancy Dorian, William Frawley, Charles Goodwin, and Deborah Schiffrin. Walt Wolfram and Kathryn Woolard generously agreed to move from Editorial Board to Associate Editorships. I also welcome these new members to the Editorial Board: Jan Blommaert, Mary Bucholtz, Niloofar Haeri, Elizabeth Keating, Yael Maschler, Bonnie McElhinny, Salikoko Mufwene, Greg Myers, Christina Bratt Paulston, Lukas Tsitsipis, and Ruth Wodak. As they know already, I rely on Editorial Board members for reviews and advice, and I appreciate their generosity with both.

Generous support from the Department of English at Carnegie Mellon University and Cambridge University Press are funding a fellowship for an editorial assistant, which is currently held by Craig O. Stewart, a Ph.D. student in Rhetoric at Carnegie Mellon University doing dissertation research on discourses of science. His help is invaluable, as is that of the journal's copyeditor, Jane McGary.