Skip to Navigation
Skip to Content
 
Home> Language Variation and Change> Top 10 Most-Cited Articles

 

Log In

Cambridge Journals Digital Archive

Click here for details about our archive digitisation project. more details

2009 Journals Catalogue

Click here to download a PDF of our latest catalogue; a comprehensive guide to all of our journals. more details

CJO Now Includes:

568,935 articles from 321 leading journals.

Top 10 Most-Cited Articles


These are the top 10 most-cited articles for this title for the previous two years. Most-cited rankings are updated on a monthly basis and provided by CrossRef.

  • Subscription Access
  • Free Access
  • Trial Access
  • Full Text HTML as well as PDF Articles Available
  • Note: Abstract, PDF and HTML open in a new window
  Article Description Save / Export / View citation Add to Basket
  Select all
Free Access   

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
 
Free Access   

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
  • Preview
  • Abstract
  • PDF (204 KB) HTML (246 KB)  
  • Request Permissions
 
Free Access   

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
  • Preview
  • Abstract
  • PDF (76 KB) HTML (339 KB)  
  • Request Permissions
 
Free Access   

The Southern Shift in Memphis, Tennessee

Valerie Fridland

Language Variation and Change, Volume 11, Issue 03, Oct 1999, pp 267-285
 
Free Access   

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
 
Free Access   

Spanish subject personal pronoun use in New York City Puerto Ricans: Can we rest the case of English contact?

Nydia Flores-Ferrán

Language Variation and Change, Volume 16, Issue 01, Mar 2004, pp 49-73
doi: 10.1017/S0954394504161048 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 01 Mar 2004
  • Preview
  • Abstract
  • PDF (88 KB) HTML (466 KB)  
  • Request Permissions
 
Free Access   

Theme and variation in Jamaican vowels

Alicia Beckford Wassink

Language Variation and Change, Volume 13, Issue 02, Jul 2001, pp 135-159
doi: 10.1017/S0954394501132023 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 07 May 2002
 
Free Access   

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
 
Free Access   

Dialect areas and dialect continua

Wilbert Heeringa and John Nerbonne

Language Variation and Change, Volume 13, Issue 03, Oct 2001, pp 375-400
doi: 10.1017/S0954394501133041 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 27 Jun 2002
 
Free Access   

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
 
  Select all
  Article Description Save / Export / View citation Add to Basket

Back to Journal Homepage

Cambridge University Press