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**JOH ...
Johansson, Christine. 2012. "Early Modern English: Relativization", in English Historical Linguistics: An International Handbook, vol I, ed. Alexander Bergs and Laurel J. Brinton,pp. 776-790. De Gruyter Mouton, Berlin.
Johansson, Christine. 2017. "Relativization", in Studies in the History of the English Language IV: Early Modern English, ed. Alexander Bergs & Laurel Brinton, pp. 267-286. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Johansson, C. & C. Geisler. 1998. "Pied Piping in Spoken English", in Explorations in Corpus Linguistics, ed. A. Renouf, pp. 82-91. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
Johnson, A. C. 1959. "The Pronoun of Direct Address in Seventeenth Century English". Unpublished PhD thesis, Columbia University.
Johnson, A. C. 1966. "The Pronoun of Direct Address in Seventeenth-Century English". American Speech 41(4): 261–269.
Johnson, Judith A. 1979. "'Ye' and 'thou' among the Canterbury pilgrims." Michigan Academician 10: 71-6.
Johnson, K. 1988. "Clausal Gerund, the ECP and Government." Linguistic Inquiry 19: 583-608.
Johnson, S., Culpeper, Jonathan, & Suhr, S. 2003. "From 'politically correct councillors' to 'Blairite nonsense': discourses of 'political correctness' in three British newspapers." Discourse and Society 14(1): 29-47.
Johnston, Everett C. 1967. "The signification of the pronoun of address in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight." Language Quarterly 5: 34-6.
Johnston, Paul A. Jr. 2015. "Vowel system restructuring in the West Midlands of England", in Studies in the History of the English Language VI: Evidence and Method in Histories of English, ed. Michael Adams, Laurel J. Brinton & R. D. Fulk, pp. 183-200. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Johnstone, Barbara. 1999. "Uses of southern speech by contemporary Texas women." Journal of Sociolinguistics 3: 505-22.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2000. "Representing American speech." American Speech 75: 390-92.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2007. "/aw/ Goes Dahntahn: Exploring the Social History of Sociolinguistic Indexicality in Pittsburgh". Texas Linguistics Forum 51: 17-27.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2009. "Pittsburghese Shirts: Commodification and the Enregisterment of an Urban Dialect". American Speech 84(2): 157-175.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2010. "Enregistering style." Rhetoric Society of America. Minneapolis, MN. May 2010.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2011. "Dialect Enregisterment in Performance". Journal of Sociolinguistics 15(5): 657–679.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2011. "Making Pittsburghese: Communication technology, expertise, and the discursive construction of a regional dialect." Language & Communication 31: 3-15.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2016 "Enregisterment: How Linguistic Items Become Linked with Ways of Speaking". Language and Linguistics Compass 10: 632–643.
Johnstone, Barbara, Jennifer Andrus & Andrew E. Danielson. 2006. "Mobility, Indexicality and the Enregisterment of 'Pittsburghese'", Journal of English Linguistics 34 (2): 77-104.
Johnstone, Barbara & Dan Baumgardt. 2004. "'Pittsburghese' online: Vernacular norming in conversation." American Speech 79: 115-45.
Johnstone, Barbara & Dan Baumgardt, Maeve Eberhardt & Scott Kiesling. 2015. Pittsburgh Speech and Pittsburghese. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Johnstone, Barbara, Neeta Bhasin & Denise Wittkofski. 2002. "'Dahntahn Pittsburgh': Monophthongal /aw/ and representations of localness in southwestern Pennsylvania." American Speech 77: 148-66.
Johnstone, Barbara & Calvin Pollak. 2016. "Mobilities, materialities, and the changing meanings of Pittsburgh speech." Journal of English Linguistics 44(3): 254–275.
Johnstone, Barbara & Scot F. Kiesling. 2008. "Indexicality and Experience: Exploring the Meanings of /aw/-monophthongization in Pittsburgh." Journal of Sociolinguistics 12: 5-33.
**JOH ...
Johansson, Christine. 2012. "Early Modern English: Relativization", in English Historical Linguistics: An International Handbook, vol I, ed. Alexander Bergs and Laurel J. Brinton,pp. 776-790. De Gruyter Mouton, Berlin.
Johansson, Christine. 2017. "Relativization", in Studies in the History of the English Language IV: Early Modern English, ed. Alexander Bergs & Laurel Brinton, pp. 267-286. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Johansson, C. & C. Geisler. 1998. "Pied Piping in Spoken English", in Explorations in Corpus Linguistics, ed. A. Renouf, pp. 82-91. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
Johnson, A. C. 1959. "The Pronoun of Direct Address in Seventeenth Century English". Unpublished PhD thesis, Columbia University.
Johnson, A. C. 1966. "The Pronoun of Direct Address in Seventeenth-Century English". American Speech 41(4): 261–269.
Johnson, Ellen. 1996. Lexical Change and Variation in the Southeastern United States, 1930–1990.University of Alabama Press.
Johnson, Judith A. 1979. "'Ye' and 'thou' among the Canterbury pilgrims." Michigan Academician 10: 71-6.
Johnson, K. 1988. "Clausal Gerund, the ECP and Government." Linguistic Inquiry 19: 583-608.
Johnson, Keith. 2014. Shakespeare’s English: A Practical Linguistic Guide. Harlow: Pearson.
Johnson, Keith. 2019. Shakespeare's Language: Perspectives Past and Present. London: Routledge.
Johnson, Keith. 2021. The History of Late Modern Englishes : An Activity-based Approach. London: Routledge.
Johnson, S., Culpeper, Jonathan, & Suhr, S. 2003. "From 'politically correct councillors' to 'Blairite nonsense': discourses of 'political correctness' in three British newspapers." Discourse and Society 14(1): 29-47.
Johnston, Everett C. 1967. "The signification of the pronoun of address in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight." Language Quarterly 5: 34-6.
Johnston, Paul A. Jr. 2015. "Vowel system restructuring in the West Midlands of England", in Studies in the History of the English Language VI: Evidence and Method in Histories of English, ed. Michael Adams, Laurel J. Brinton & R. D. Fulk, pp. 183-200. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Johnstone, Barbara. 1999. "Uses of southern speech by contemporary Texas women." Journal of Sociolinguistics 3: 505-22.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2000. "Representing American speech." American Speech 75: 390-92.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2007. "/aw/ Goes Dahntahn: Exploring the Social History of Sociolinguistic Indexicality in Pittsburgh". Texas Linguistics Forum 51: 17-27.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2009. "Pittsburghese Shirts: Commodification and the Enregisterment of an Urban Dialect". American Speech 84(2): 157-175.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2010. "Enregistering style." Rhetoric Society of America. Minneapolis, MN. May 2010.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2011. "Dialect Enregisterment in Performance". Journal of Sociolinguistics 15(5): 657–679.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2011. "Making Pittsburghese: Communication technology, expertise, and the discursive construction of a regional dialect." Language & Communication 31: 3-15.
Johnstone, Barbara. 2016 "Enregisterment: How Linguistic Items Become Linked with Ways of Speaking". Language and Linguistics Compass 10: 632–643.
Johnstone, Barbara, Jennifer Andrus & Andrew E. Danielson. 2006. "Mobility, Indexicality and the Enregisterment of 'Pittsburghese'", Journal of English Linguistics 34 (2): 77-104.
Johnstone, Barbara & Dan Baumgardt. 2004. "'Pittsburghese' online: Vernacular norming in conversation." American Speech 79: 115-45.
Johnstone, Barbara & Dan Baumgardt, Maeve Eberhardt & Scott Kiesling. 2015. Pittsburgh Speech and Pittsburghese. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Johnstone, Barbara, Neeta Bhasin & Denise Wittkofski. 2002. "'Dahntahn Pittsburgh': Monophthongal /aw/ and representations of localness in southwestern Pennsylvania." American Speech 77: 148-66.
Johnstone, Barbara & Calvin Pollak. 2016. "Mobilities, materialities, and the changing meanings of Pittsburgh speech." Journal of English Linguistics 44(3): 254–275.
Johnstone, Barbara & Scot F. Kiesling. 2008. "Indexicality and Experience: Exploring the Meanings of /aw/-monophthongization in Pittsburgh." Journal of Sociolinguistics 12: 5-33.