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Language Variation and Change
Top 10 Most-Cited Articles
These are the top 10 most-cited articles for this title. Most-cited rankings are updated on a monthly basis and provided by CrossRef.
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Word frequency and context of use in the lexical diffusion of phonetically conditioned sound change
Joan Bybee
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 14
,
Issue 03
, Oct 2002, pp 261-290
doi: 10.1017/S0954394502143018
(About doi)
, Published online by Cambridge University Press 10 Apr 2003
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Another piece for the verbal
-s
story: Evidence from Devon in southwest England
Elizabeth Godfrey and Sali Tagliamonte
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 11
,
Issue 01
, Mar 1999, pp 87-121
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(617 KB)
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When the music changes, you change too: Gender and language change in Cajun English
Sylvie Dubois and Barbara Horvath
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 11
,
Issue 03
, Oct 1999, pp 287-313
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Women and sound change: Conservative and innovative behavior by the same speakers
Margaret A. Maclagan, Elizabeth Gordon and Gillian Lewis
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 11
,
Issue 01
, Mar 1999, pp 19-41
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Weak vowels in modern RP: An acoustic study of happ
Y
-tensing and
KIT
/schwa shift
Anne Fabricius
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 14
,
Issue 02
, Jul 2002, pp 211-237
doi: 10.1017/S0954394502142037
(About doi)
, Published online by Cambridge University Press 08 Nov 2002
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The Southern Shift in Memphis, Tennessee
Valerie Fridland
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 11
,
Issue 03
, Oct 1999, pp 267-285
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The grammaticization of
going to
in (African American) English
Shana Poplack and Sali Tagliamonte
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 11
,
Issue 03
, Oct 1999, pp 315-342
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Do you hear what I hear? Experimental measurement of the perceptual salience of acoustically manipulated vowel variants by Southern speakers in Memphis, TN
Valerie Fridland, Kathryn Bartlett and Roger Kreuz
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 16
,
Issue 01
, Mar 2004, pp 1-16
doi: 10.1017/S0954394504161012
(About doi)
, Published online by Cambridge University Press 01 Mar 2004
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Reversing the trajectory of language change: Subject–verb agreement with
be
in New Zealand English
Jennifer Hay and Daniel Schreier
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 16
,
Issue 03
, Oct 2004, pp 209-235
doi: 10.1017/S0954394504163047
(About doi)
, Published online by Cambridge University Press 08 Nov 2004
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Acoustic evidence for a push-chain shift in the Intermediate Period of New Zealand English
Christian Langstrof
Language Variation and Change
,
Volume 18
,
Issue 02
, Jul 2006, pp 141-164
doi: 10.1017/S0954394506060078
(About doi)
, Published online by Cambridge University Press 27 Apr 2006
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