Review published In: English World-Wide
Vol. 35:2 (2014) ► pp.230–233
Book review
. Urban North-Eastern English: Tyneside to Teesside. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2012. 128 pp. GBP 60.00 hb;. ISBN 978-074-863-929-8 GBP 19.99978-074-864-152-9
Reviewed by
Published online: 2 June 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.35.2.06nan
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.35.2.06nan
References (6)
Barnfield, Kate and Isabelle Buchstaller. 2010. “Intensifiers on Tyneside: longitudinal development and new trends”. English World-Wide 311: 252–87.
Beal, Joan and Lourdes Burbano-Elizondo. 2010. “‘All the lads and lasses’: lexical variation in Tyne and Wear”. Paper presented at Sociolinguistics Symposium 18, University of Southampton.
Docherty, Gerard and Paul Foulkes. 1999. “Newcastle Upon Tyne and Derby: instrumental phonetics and variationist studies”. In Paul Foulkes and Gerard Docherty, eds. Urban Voices: Accent Studies in the British Isles. London: Arnold, 47–71.
Montgomery, Chris. 2006. “Northern English dialects: a perceptual approach”. Ph.D. thesis, University of Sheffield.
Moore, Emma and Julia Snell. 2011. “‘Oh they’re top, them’: right dislocated tags and interactional stance”. In Frans Gregersen, Jeffrey Parrott and Pia Quist, eds. Language Variation – European Perspectives III. Selected Papers from the Fifth International Conference on Language Variation in Europe (ICLaVE 5), Copenhagen. Amsterdam, Philadelphia: Benjamins, 97–110.
