Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-pkt8n Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-27T15:53:46.409Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

T-time in New Zealand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 October 2008

Abstract

A report on developments in pronunciation in the English of New Zealand

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bayard, Donn. 1987. ‘Class and change in New Zealand English: a summary report’. In Te Reo 30: 336.Google Scholar
Bayard, Donn. 1990a. ‘“God help us if we all sound like this”: Attitudes to New Zealand and other English accents.’ In Allan, Bell & Janet, Holmes, eds., 6796.Google Scholar
Bayard, Donn. 1990b. ‘Minder, Mork and Mindy? (-t) glottalisation and post-vocalic (-r) in younger New Zealand English speakers’. In Allan, Bell & Janet, Holmes, eds., 149164.Google Scholar
Bayard, Donn. 1995. Kiwitalk: Sociolinguistics and New Zealand Society. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.Google Scholar
Bell, Allan. 1977. The Language of Radio News in Auckland: A Sociolinguistic Study of Style, Audience and Subediting Variation. PhD thesis. Auckland: University of Auckland.Google Scholar
Bell, Allan. 1982. ‘Radio: the style of news language’. In the Journal of Communication 32, 1: 150–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, Allan. 1990. ‘Audience and referee design in New Zealand media language’. In Bell, Allan & Holmes, Janet, eds., 165194.Google Scholar
Bell, Allan & Holmes, Janet. 1990. New Zealand Ways of Speaking English. Wellington: Victorian University Press. Clevedon, UK: Multilingual Matters.Google Scholar
Gordon, Elizabeth. 1991. ‘The development of spoken English in New Zealand’. In McGregor, Graham & Williams, Mark, eds., Dirty Silence: Aspects of Language and Literature in New Zealand. 1928. Auckland: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gordon, Elizabeth & Abell, Marcia. 1990. ‘Attitudes to New Zealand English’. In Bell, Allan & Holmes, Janet, eds., 2148.Google Scholar
Harris, John. 1994. English Sound Structure. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Holmes, Janet. 1994. ‘New Zealand flappers: an analysis of T Voicing in New Zealand English’. In English World-Wide 15, 2: 195224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmes, Janet. 1995. ‘Glottal stops in New Zealand English: an analysis of variants of word-final/t/’. In Linguistics 33, 3: 433463.Google Scholar
Holmes, Janet. 1997. ‘Setting new standards: sound changes and gender in New Zealand English.’ In English World-Wide 18, 1: 107142.Google Scholar
Holmes, Janet, Bell, Allan & Boyce, Mary. 1991. Variation and Change in New Zealand English: a Social Dialect Investigation. Project Report to the Social Sciences Committee of the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology. Wellington: Victoria University.Google Scholar
Labov, William. 1980. ‘The social origins of sound change’. In Labov, William, ed., Locating Language in Time and Space. New York: Academic Press. 251–65.Google Scholar
MacAllister, A. H. 1963. A Year's Course in Speech Training. London: University of London Press.Google Scholar
Macauley, R. K. S. 1977. Language, Social Class and Education: a Glasgow Study. Edinburgh: University Press.Google Scholar
Mees, Inger. 1987. ‘Glottal stop as a prestigious feature in Cardiff English’. In English World-Wide 8, 1: 2539. Amsterdam: John Benjamin.Google Scholar
Meyerhoff, Miriam. 1992a. ‘Lexical shift in working class New Zealand English: variation in the use of lexical pairs’. In English World-Wide 14: 2: 231–48. Amsterdam: John Benjamin.Google Scholar
Newbrook, Mark. 1986. Sociolinguistic Reflexes of Dialect Interference in West Wirral. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Reid, Euan 1978. ‘Social and stylistic variation in the speech of children: some evidence from Edinburgh’. In Trudgill, Peter, ed., Sociolinguistic Patterns in British English. London: Edward Arnold. 158–71.Google Scholar
Rosewarne, David. 1994. ‘Estuary English – tomorrow's RP’. In English Today 37: 39.Google Scholar
Trudgill, Peter. 1974. The Social Differentiation of English in Norwich. Cambridge: University Press.Google Scholar
Trudgill, Peter. 1986. Dialects in Contact. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Trudgill, Peter. 1988. ‘Norwich revisited: recent linguistic changes in an English urban dialect.’ In English World-Wide 9, 1: 3349.Google Scholar
Vaughan, Graham M. & Huygens, Ingrid. 1990. ‘Sociolinguistic stereotyping in New Zealand’. In Bell, Allan & Holmes, Janet, eds., 4966.Google Scholar
Vine, Bernadette. 1995. ‘Anyway we're not British’: A Social Dialect Study of Two Features of the Speech of Thirty Pakeha Women from Wanganui. PhD thesis. Wellington: Victoria University.Google Scholar
Vine, Bernadette. Forthcoming. ‘Americanisms in the New Zealand English lexicon’. To appear in English World-Wide. Amsterdam: John Benjamin.Google Scholar
Wells, J. C. 1982. Accents of English. Cambridge: University Press.Google Scholar