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1
It's all about the interaction: listener responses as a discourse-organisational variable ...
Eiswirth, Mirjam Elisabeth. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2020
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2
Word-final /t/-release and linguistic style: An investigation of the speech of two Jewish women from metro Detroit
In: Master's Theses and Doctoral Dissertations (2020)
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3
Investigating Language Variation and Change in Appalachian Dialects: The Case of the Perfective Done
In: Honors Thesis (2020)
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4
Cross-generational linguistic variation in the Canberra Vietnamese heritage language community: A corpus-centred investigation
Nguyen, Li. - : University of Cambridge, 2020. : Churchill, 2020
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5
It's all about the interaction: listener responses as a discourse-organisational variable
Eiswirth, Mirjam Elisabeth. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2020
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6
Latino, Latina, Latin@, Latine, and Latinx: Gender Inclusive Oral Expression in Spanish
In: Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository (2020)
Abstract: Gender identity is a rapidly changing concept and so is the language that we use to talk about ourselves or others that may identify outside of the traditional binary system. Spanish typically functions as a masculine generic-dominated language, but there are attempts to make the language more inclusive. One of those attempts appeared in the early 2000s: -x. This marker is unpronounceable as a syllable nucleus. Via an online survey and virtual interviews, this project discovers how Spanish speakers from various countries incorporate gender inclusive language (IL) in writing and speech. Which speakers incorporate IL? Additionally, why do they use IL? The statistically significant variables are gender identity and birth country. Growing faster in popularity than the -x is the morpheme -e, already existent in the Spanish phonological and lexical systems. The interviews reveal that speakers who desire to use IL do not do so infallibly and their motivations are varied.
Keyword: gender and language; Inclusive language; language change and variation; sociolinguistics; Spanish inclusive language; Spanish linguistics
URL: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/7297
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=9794&context=etd
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7
Reconsidering the variable context: A phonological argument for (t) and (d) deletion
Johnson, W.; Kasstan, J.; Amos, J.. - : Cambridge University Press, 2020
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