Title |
Author |
Journal |
Issue |
Published |
ISBN / DOI |
Subjects |
Series |
Marriages of unequal languages: Use of Bidayuh among children from Chinese, Malay and Melanau mixed marriages
|
Su-Hie Ting, Fallisca Evon Berek |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 2-4 (2021)
|
Jul 28, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.41152
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Shift in language dominance in bilinguals: An acculturation perspective
|
Kate Hammer |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 2-4 (2021)
|
Jul 28, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.33335
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Language attitudes and the subjective perception of language in San Andrés and Providencia (Colombia): An integrative approach
|
Héctor Ramírez-Cruz |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 2-4 (2021)
|
Jul 28, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.40956
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Isn’t the perception of LIKE by California college students, like, paradoxical?
|
Pierre Habasque |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 2-4 (2021)
|
Jul 28, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.40480
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
At the intersection of language, gender, and religion: Self-reported linguistic ideologies and practices of Muslim women in Barcelona
|
Farah Ali |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 2-4 (2021)
|
Jul 28, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.41159
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Indexing costeñol: Metapragmatic discourse on Colombian costeño Spanish in popular telenovelas
|
Padraic Michael Quinn |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 2-4 (2021)
|
Jul 28, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.42340
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Negotiating language barriers: Customer care delivery practices of a selected telecommunication company in Ghana
|
Grace Diabah |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 2-4 (2021)
|
Jul 28, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.41465
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Resonating embodiment: Everyday metaphorical abstractions in Safaliba
|
Ari Sherris, Paul Schaefer, Eden Kosiaku |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 1 (2021) Special Issue: Re-thinking everyday metaphors through Indigenous Ghanaian languages: Shifting the center to the margin
|
May 25, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.42385
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
The semantic extensions of tu ‘to uproot’/‘to pull out’ in Nzema discourse: A Conceptual Metaphoric Perspective
|
Mohammed Yakub |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 1 (2021) Special Issue: Re-thinking everyday metaphors through Indigenous Ghanaian languages: Shifting the center to the margin
|
May 25, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.42390
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Conceptualizing MATURITY in the Mfantse dialect of Akan
|
Grace Nana Aba Dawson-Ahmoah, Patrick Nana Wonkyi |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 1 (2021) Special Issue: Re-thinking everyday metaphors through Indigenous Ghanaian languages: Shifting the center to the margin
|
May 25, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.42341
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
‘The heart has caught me’: Anger metaphors in Likpakpaln (Konkomba)
|
Abraham Kwesi Bisilki, Kofi Yakpo |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 1 (2021) Special Issue: Re-thinking everyday metaphors through Indigenous Ghanaian languages: Shifting the center to the margin
|
May 25, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.42338
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
A Conceptual Metaphor Theory analysis of anishi ‘eyes’-based metaphors in Gonja
|
Kenneth Bodua-Mango |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 1 (2021) Special Issue: Re-thinking everyday metaphors through Indigenous Ghanaian languages: Shifting the center to the margin
|
May 25, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.42355
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
‘My heart tears’ and ‘my eyes open’: Exploring the verb te ‘to tear’ and its range of interpretations in Asante-Twi
|
Dorothy Pokua Agyepong |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 1 (2021) Special Issue: Re-thinking everyday metaphors through Indigenous Ghanaian languages: Shifting the center to the margin
|
May 25, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.42328
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Re-thinking everyday metaphors through Indigenous Ghanaian languages: Shifting the center to the margins
|
Ari Sherris |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 15 No. 1 (2021) Special Issue: Re-thinking everyday metaphors through Indigenous Ghanaian languages: Shifting the center to the margin
|
May 25, 2021 |
10.1558/sols.42392
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Towards the elaboration of a diastratic model in historical analyses of koineization
|
Joshua Brown |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 14 No. 4 (2020)
|
Dec 21, 2020 |
10.1558/sols.39590
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Trilling as a sociolinguistic variable: Ethnicity and variation in the Hebrew dorsal fricatives
|
Roey J. Gafter |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 14 No. 4 (2020)
|
Dec 21, 2020 |
10.1558/sols.39210
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
The language policy of trilingual transnational families living between Antioch, Paris and Berlin
|
Suat Istanbullu |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 14 No. 4 (2020)
|
Dec 21, 2020 |
10.1558/sols.39512
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Call center agents’ skills: Invisible, illegible, and misunderstood
|
Johanna Tovar |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 14 No. 4 (2020)
|
Dec 21, 2020 |
10.1558/sols.39555
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
English, national and local linguae francae in the language ecologies of Uganda and Tanzania
|
Susanne Mohr, Steffen Lorenz, Dunlop Ochieng |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 14 No. 3 (2020) Special Issue: African sociolinguistics between urbanity and rurality
|
Jul 22, 2020 |
10.1558/sols.38800
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|
Playing with accents: On Ugandan Englishes and indexical signs of urbanity and rurality
|
Nico Nassenstein |
Sociolinguistic Studies |
Vol 14 No. 3 (2020) Special Issue: African sociolinguistics between urbanity and rurality
|
Jul 22, 2020 |
10.1558/sols.38788
|
Gender Studies
Linguistics
|
|