This volume is concerned with one of the few thorough-going Labovian studies carried out in Britain. Based on a survey of over hundred randomly selected informants from the towns of Bradford, Halifax and Huddersfield, it deals first with the methodology employed, and then sketches some aspects of the ‘traditional’ dialects of the area before describing a large number of variables. Other non-standard features encountered during the survey are described, since these too are part of the changing patterns of speech in West Yorkshire. The final chapter draws a distinction between ‘dialect’ and ‘accent’ which is slightly different from that generally employed, and suggests that while ‘dialect’ features seem to have declined under the pressure of the standard language, ‘accent’ still persists as a social differentiator.
2025. United Kingdom, Northern Englishes. In The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of World Englishes, ► pp. 1 ff.
Jamieson, E
2025. 1941957 “People widnae understand that, wint they no?”: Negative anchor tag questions in northern British Englishes. In English Sociosyntax, ► pp. 193 ff.
Whisker‐Taylor, Kate
2025. Yorkshire English. In The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of World Englishes, ► pp. 1 ff.
Bailey, George
2024. Three’s a crowd: Ternary (ing) variation in the North of England. Language Variation and Change 36:3 ► pp. 283 ff.
Britain, David
2024. Grammatical Variation in England. In Language in Britain and Ireland, ► pp. 98 ff.
Ciancia, Carmen
2023. L-Vocalisation in London English
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SON, JANG JI & ANA GARCÍA TESORO
2023. Pragmática sociocultural del tuteo en el español hablado en Medellín (Colombia): caracteres refinado, cariñoso y afeminado. Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 100:6 ► pp. 583 ff.
Flatt, Jake & Laura Esteban-Segura
2021. A corpus-based study of some aspects of the Notts subdialect. Research in Corpus Linguistics 9:2 ► pp. 131 ff.
Foulkes, Paul
2020. Phonological Variation. In The Handbook of English Linguistics, ► pp. 407 ff.
2019. Comparing the Received Pronunciation of J. R. Firth and Daniel Jones: A sociophonetic perspective. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 49:3 ► pp. 381 ff.
Rupp, Laura & David Britain
2019. Verbal –s in Existential there Sentences. In Linguistic Perspectives on a Variable English Morpheme, ► pp. 237 ff.
Rupp, Laura & David Britain
2019. Past BE. In Linguistic Perspectives on a Variable English Morpheme, ► pp. 165 ff.
Whisker-Taylor, Kate & Lynn Clark
2019. Yorkshire Assimilation: Exploring the Production and Perception of a Geographically Restricted Variable. Journal of English Linguistics 47:3 ► pp. 221 ff.
WILHELM, Stephan
2018. Segmental and suprasegmental change in North West Yorkshire – a new case of supralocalisation ?. Corela :HS-24
Wilhelm, Stephan
2022. Perspective phonologique sur la détermination nominale. Corela :HS-37
Burland, Kate
2017. Where the Black Country Meets ‘Black Barnsley’1. In Language and a Sense of Place, ► pp. 234 ff.
Chad Hall, Chad
2017. La pronunciación de /r/ de hablantes anglo-ingleses y punjabi-ingleses en Yorkshire del Oeste. Matices en Lenguas Extranjeras :11 ► pp. 132 ff.
Robinson, Jonathan
2017. British Library Sound Recordings of Vernacular Speech. In Listening to the Past, ► pp. 13 ff.
Watson, Kevin
2017. Dialects of British and Southern Hemisphere English. In The Handbook of Dialectology, ► pp. 439 ff.
Jones, Lucy
2016. “If a Muslim says ‘homo’, nothing gets done”: Racist discourse and in-group identity construction in an LGBT youth group. Language in Society 45:1 ► pp. 113 ff.
2015. The Reduced Definite Articleth’ in Late Middle English and Beyond: An Insight from the Definiteness Cycle. Journal of Germanic Linguistics 27:2 ► pp. 105 ff.
BUCHSTALLER, ISABELLE, KAREN P. CORRIGAN, ANDERS HOLMBERG, PATRICK HONEYBONE & WARREN MAGUIRE
2013. T-to-R and the Northern Subject Rule: questionnaire-based spatial, social and structural linguistics. English Language and Linguistics 17:1 ► pp. 85 ff.
Willoughby, Louisa, Donna Starks & Kerry Taylor-Leech
2013. Is the Cultural Cringe Alive and Kicking? Adolescent Mythscapes of Australian English in Queensland and Victoria. Australian Journal of Linguistics 33:1 ► pp. 31 ff.
Roeder, Rebecca V.
2012. Definite Article Reduction and The Obligatory Contour Principle in York English1. Transactions of the Philological Society 110:2 ► pp. 225 ff.
Jang, Ji Son
2010. Pronominal Address Forms of College Students in Medellin (Colombia) from the Sociopragmatic Point of View: Socioeconomic Status and Sex. Íkala, Revista de Lenguaje y Cultura 15:3 ► pp. 43 ff.
Jones, Mari C.
2010. Channel Island English. In The Lesser-Known Varieties of English, ► pp. 35 ff.
Cheshire, Jenny & Sue Fox
2009. Was/werevariation: A perspective from London. Language Variation and Change 21:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Tagliamonte, Sali A. & Rebecca V. Roeder
2009. Variation in the English definite article: Socio‐historical linguistics in t'speech community1. Journal of Sociolinguistics 13:4 ► pp. 435 ff.
BROADBENT, JUDITH M.
2008. t-to-rin West Yorkshire English. English Language and Linguistics 12:1 ► pp. 141 ff.
BROADBENT, JUDITH M.
2009. The *amn'tgap: The view from West Yorkshire. Journal of Linguistics 45:2 ► pp. 251 ff.
Trudgill, Peter
2008. English Dialect “Default Singulars,” Was versus Were, Verner's Law, and Germanic Dialects. Journal of English Linguistics 36:4 ► pp. 341 ff.
Tagliamonte, Sali
2004. Comparative Sociolinguistics. In The Handbook of Language Variation and Change, ► pp. 729 ff.
Khattab, Ghada
2002. /l/ production in English-Arabic bilingual speakers. International Journal of Bilingualism 6:3 ► pp. 335 ff.
Giner, MarÍA F. GarcÍA-Bermejo & Michael Montgomery
2001. Yorkshire English Two Hundred Years Ago. Journal of English Linguistics 29:4 ► pp. 346 ff.
Mehrotra, Raja Ram & France Mugler
2000. Indian English. Texts and Interpretation - (1998). Varieties of English Around the World, Text Series Vol. 7. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.. South Pacific Journal of Psychology 12 ► pp. 64 ff.
Tagliamonte, Sali & Jennifer Smith
1999. Analogical Leveling in Samaná English. Journal of English Linguistics 27:1 ► pp. 8 ff.
Ball, Catherine N.
1996. A diachronic study of relative markers in spoken and written English. Language Variation and Change 8:2 ► pp. 227 ff.
Robert Burchfield
1994. The Cambridge History of the English Language,
Ihalainen, Ossi
1994. THE DIALECTS OF ENGLAND SINCE 1776. In The Cambridge History of the English Language, ► pp. 197 ff.
Bell, Allan & Janet Holmes
1992. H‐droppin’: Two sociolinguistic variables in New Zealand English1. Australian Journal of Linguistics 12:2 ► pp. 223 ff.
Holmes, Janet
1991. Language and gender. Language Teaching 24:4 ► pp. 207 ff.
Widdowson, J. D. A.
1990. The Eleventh Hour? Monitoring the English Rural Tradition in the 1990s and Beyond. Rural History 1:1 ► pp. 131 ff.
[no author supplied]
1992. 1992 HSS Colloquium: Abstracts. Henry Sweet Society for the History of Linguistic Ideas Bulletin 19:1 ► pp. 5 ff.
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2013. References. In The Guidebook to Sociolinguistics, ► pp. 333 ff.
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2013. Variation inLanguage. In The Guidebook to Sociolinguistics, ► pp. 163 ff.
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2013. Reference Guide for Varieties of English. In A Dictionary of Varieties of English, ► pp. 363 ff.
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2024. English. In Language in Britain and Ireland, ► pp. 9 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 12 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.