Review published In: English World-Wide
Vol. 21:2 (2000) ► pp.312–320
Book review
. New Zealand English. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2000. Amsterdam,Philadelphia: Benjamins, 2000. 366 pp. Hfl. 150 (hb).
Reviewed by
Published online: 30 March 2001
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.21.2.11tru
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.21.2.11tru
References (12)
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Gordon, Elizabeth, Lyle Campbell, Gillian Lewis, Margaret Maclagan and Peter Trudgill. fc. New-dialect Formation and Linguistic Change: The Origins and Evolution of New Zealand English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gordon, Elizabeth, Lyle Campbell, Gillian Lewis, Margaret Maclagan, Peter Trudgill and Margaret Maclagan. 1990. “A longitudinal study of the ‘ear/air’ contrast in New Zealand speech”. In Allan Bell and Janet Holmes, eds. New Zealand Ways of Speaking English. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 129–48.
Holmes, Janet and Allan Bell. 1992. “On shear markets and sharing sheep: The merger of EAR and AIR diphthongs in New Zealand English”. Language Variation and Change 41: 251–73.
Hundt, Marianne. 1998. New Zealand English Grammar: Fact or Fiction? Amsterdam, Philadelphia: Benjamins.
Jacob, Jenny. 1991. “A grammatical comparison of the casual speech of Maori and Pakeha women in Levin”. Te Reo 341: 53–70.
Maclagan, Margaret and Elizabeth Gordon. 1996. “Out of the AIR and into the EAR: Another view ofthe New Zealand diphthong merger”. Language Variation and Change 81: 125–47.
Rickford, John, Norma Mendoza-Denton, Thomas Wasow and Julie Espinoza. 1995. “Syntactic variation and change in progress: Loss of verbal coda in topic-restricting as far as constructions”. Language 711: 102–31.
