In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

References Aitchison, Jean. 1991. Language Change: Progress or Decay? 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Algeo, John. 1989. British-American Lexical Differences: A Typology ofInterdialectal Variation. In English across Cultures-Cultures across English, eds. Ofelia Garcia and Ricardo Otheguy. New York: Mouton de Gruyter. Algeo, John, and Adele Algeo. 1988-92. Among the New Words. American Speech. Allen, Harold B. 1985. Sex-Linked Variation in the Response of Dialect Informants. Part 1: Lexicon. Journal of English Linguistics 18:97-123. 1986a. Sex-Linked Variation in the Response ofDialect Informants . Part 2: Pronunciation. Journal of English Linguistics 19:4-24. 1986b. Sex-Linked Variation in theResponse of Dialect Informants . Part 3: Grammar. Journal ofEnglish Linguistics 19:14976 . 1989. New or Old-Fashioned? Informant Awareness of Chronological Status. American Speech 64:3-11. Anttila, Raimo. 1972. An Introduction to Historical and Comparative Linguistics. New York: Macmillan. Bachtel, Douglas C., and Susan R. Boatright. 1992. The Georgia County Guide. 11th ed. Athens: Cooperative Extension Service and Dept. of Housing and Consumer Economics, University of Georgia. Bailey, Guy, and Cynthia Bernstein. 1989. Methodology for a Phonological Survey ofTexas. In Computer Methods in Dialectology, eds. William A. Kretzschmar, Jr., Edgar W. Schneider, and Ellen Johnson. Journal ofEnglish Linguistics 22:6-16. Bailey, Guy, and Natalie Maynor. 1989. The Divergence Controversy. American Speech 64:12-39. Bailey, Guy, Thomas Wikle, and Lori Sand. 1991. The Focus ofLinguistic Innovation in Texas. English Worldwide 12:195-214. References 295 Bailey, Guy, Tom Wikle, Jan Tillery, and Lori Sand. 1991. The Apparent Time Construct. Language Variation and Change 3:241-64. Bartley, Numan V. 1990. The Creation of Modern Georgia. 2nd ed. Athens: University of Georgia Press. Baugh, John. 1983. Black Street Speech. Austin: University of Texas Press. 1991. The Politicization of Changing Terms of Self-Reference among American Slave Descendants. American Speech 66: 133-46. Bell, Allan. 1984. Language Style as Audience Design. Language in Society 13:145-204. Berlin, Brent. 1972. Speculations on the Growth of Ethnobotanical Nomenclature . Language in Society 1:51-86. Bernstein, Cynthia. 1993. Measuring Social Causes ofPhonological Variation in Texas. American Speech 68:227-40. Breal, Michel. 1964 [1897]. Semantics: Studies in the Science ofMeaning , trans. Nina Cust. New York: Dover. Butters, Ronald. 1989a. The Death ofBlack English. New York: Verlag Peter Lang. ---. 1989b. Linguistic Profit. Paper presented at the Southeastern Conference on Linguistics XL, Norfolk, VA. Cameron, Deborah, and Jennifer Coates. 1988. Some Problems in the Sociolinguistic Explanation of Sex Differences. In Women in Their Speech Communities, eds. Jennifer Coates and Deborah Cameron. London: Longman. Carver, Craig M. 1987. American Regional Dialects: A Word Geography . Ann ArbQr: University of Michigan Press. Chambers, J. K. 1992. Dialect Acquisition. Language 68:673-705. ---. 1993. Sociolinguistic Dialectology. In American Dialect Research , ed. Dennis R. Preston. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Chambers, J. K., and Peter Trudgill. 1980. Dialectology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Christian, Donna, Walt Wolfram, and Nanjo Dube. 1988. Variation and Change in Geographically Isolated Communities: Appalachian and OzarkEnglish. Tuscaloosa, AL: Publication ofthe American Dialect Society Number 74. Coates, Jennifer. 1993. Women, Men, and Language: A Sociolinguistic Account ofGender Differences inLanguage. London: Longman. Crozier, Alan. 1984. The Scotch-Irish Influence on American English. American Speech 59:310-31. 296 References Daniel, Pete. 1986. Standing at the Crossroads: Southern Life in the Twentieth Century. New York: Hill and Wang. Davis, Alva L., Raven!. McDavid, Jr., and Virginia G. McDavid. 1969. A Compilation ofthe Work Sheets ofthe Linguistic Atlas ofthe United States and Canada and Associated Projects. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Davis, Lawrence M. 1983. English Dialectology: An Introduction. University : University of Alabama Press. ---. 1990. Statistics in Dialectology. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. Davis, Lawrence M., and Charles L. Houck. 1992. Is There a Midland Dialect Area?-Again. American Speech 67:61-70. Doe, John. 1988. Speak into the Mirror: A Story ofLinguistic Anthropology . Lanham, MD: University Press of America. Doyle, Rodger. 1993. No-Phone Homes. Atlantic Monthly (June):77. Eckert, Penelope. 1989a. Jocks and Burnouts: Social Identity in the High School. New York: Teachers College Press. 1989b. The Whole Woman: Sex and Gender Differences in Variation. Language Variation and Change 1:245-68. 1991. Social Polarization and the Choice of Unguistic Variants. In New Ways ofAnalyzing Sound Change, ed. Penelope Eckert. New York: Academic Press. Eckert, Penny, and Sally McConnell-Ginet. 1992. Gender in Sociolinguistic Research: Time for a Paradigm Shift. Presented at New Ways of Analyzing Variation (NWAV) 21. Feagin, Crawford. 1979. Variation and Change in Alabama English. Washington: Georgetown University Press. Fischer, David Hackett...

Share