Aitchison, Jean.
1981. Language Change: Progress or Decay? London: Fontana Paperbacks. Barber, Charles.
2000. The English Language: A Historical Introduction. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press. Bergs,
Alexander, Brinton, Laurel J. (eds.). 2012. English Historical Linguistics.
An International Handbook. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. Blake, Norman
(ed.). 1992. The Cambridge history of the English language. Vol.2: 1066-1476.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Blount, Ben.G. &
Sanches, Mary. (eds) 1977. Sociocultural
Dimensions of Sound Change, NY: Academic Press. Brinton, Laurel
J. & Traugott, Elizabeth Closs. 2005. Lexicalization and
Grammaticalization in Language Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press. Burchfield,
Robert (ed). 1994. The Cambridge History of the English language. Vol.5:
English in Britain and Overseas: Origins and Development. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press. Burnley, David.
2000. The History of the English Language: A Source Book. London:
Longman. Cable, Thomas.
2002. A Companion to Baugh and Cable's History of the English Language.
London: Routledge. Cakkary, Robert.E.
1975. "Phonological Change and the Development of an Urban Dialect in
Illinois”, Language in Society 4,
155-69. Campbell, Lyle. 1999/2004.
Historical Linguistics. An Introduction. Cambridge, Ma: The MIT Press. Chambers, Jack,
Peter Trudgill & Natalie Schilling-Estes (eds.). 2004. The Handbook of
Language Variation and Change. London: Blackwell Publishing Ltd Chen, Matthew A.
1975. "Sound Change: Actuation and Implementation, Language, 51/2: 255-281. Coates,
Jennifer. 2004. Women, Men, and Language: A Sociolinguistic Account of
Gender Differences in Language. London: Pearson Longman. Conde-Silvestre, Camilo.
2016. A ‘third-wave’ historical sociolinguistic approach to late Middle English
correspondence: Evidence. from the Stonor Letters. In
Russi, Cinzia (ed.) Current Trends in Historical Sociolinguistics. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter (46-66) Coupland,
Nikolas & Jaworski, Adam. 2009. The New Sociolinguistics Reader.
London: Palgrave. Coupland,
Nikolas. 2007. Language Variation and Identity. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press. Denison, David, &
Hogg, Richard. 2006. A History of the English Language. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press. Fairclough,
Norman. 2001. Language and Power. London: Longman. Fasold, Ralph W.
& Schiffrin, Deborah (eds).1989. Language
Change and Variation, Washington DC: Georgetown Univ. Press. Fitzmaurice,
Susan M. & Taavitsainen, Irma (eds). 2007. Methods in Pragmatics.
Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Gumperz, John J.
1976. “Social Network and Language Shift", Working Paper 46, Berkeley (Language Behaviour Research
Laboratory). Harris, John.
1985. Phonological Variation and Change.
Cambridge:
C.U.P. Hernández-Campoy,
Juan M. 2016. Authorship and gender in English historical
sociolinguistic research: Samples from the Paston Letters. 2016. In Russi, Cinzia (ed.) Currente Trends in Historical
Sociolinguistics. Berlin: Walter de
Gruyter (108-142) Hickey, Raymon.
2003 (ed.). Motives for Language Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Hock, HansHenrich.
1986. Principles of historical
linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Hogg, Richard
(ed). 1992. The Cambridge History of the English Language. Vol.1:The
Beginnings to 1066. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Holmes, Janet.
2008. An Introduction to Sociolinguistics. London: Longman. Irvine, Judith T.
1978. “Wolof Noun Classification: The Social Setting of Divergent Change",
Language in Society, 7/1: 37-64. King, Robert Desmond.
1969. Historical linguistics and
Generative Grammar, Prentice Hall. Krishnamurti,
Bh. 1978. “Areal and Lexical Diffusion of Sound Change", Language, 54, 1-20. Kytö, Merja,
John Scahill & Harumi Tanabe (eds). 2010. Language Change and Variation
from old English to Late Modern English: A Festschrift for Minoji Akimoto.
Berlin: Peter Lang. Labov, William.
1963. “The Social Motivation of Sound Change", Word, 19: 3, 273-309. Lass, Roger
(ed). 2000. The Cambridge history of the English language. Vol.3: 1476- 1776.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Martinet, André.
1960. Elements of General Linguistics. London: Faber and Faber. Milroy, James & Milroy, Leslie. 1985. Linguistic change, social
network and speaker innovation. Journal of Linguistics, 21(2),
339-384. doi:10.1017/S0022226700010306 Narrog Heiko
& Heine, Bernd (eds.) 2011. The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization.
Oxford: Oxford University Press. Romaine, Suzanne
(ed). 1999. The Cambridge History of the English Language. Vol. 4: 1776-1997.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Romaine,
Suzanne. 2000. Language in Society: An Introduction to Sociolinguistics.
Oxford: Oxford University Press. Russi, Cinzia. 2016. "Introduction". In
Russi, Cinzia (ed.) Current Trends in Historical Sociolinguistics. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter (1-18) Stockwell,
Peter. 2007. Sociolinguistics: A Resource Book for Students. London:
Routledge. Trudgill,Peter. 1974. “Linguistic Change and Diffusion: Description and
Explanation in Sociolinguistic Dialect Geography”, Language in Society, 3/2: 215-246. Trudgill, Peter.
2000. Sociolinguistics: An Introduction to Language and Society. London:
Penguin. Venneman, Teo.
1983. “Causality in Language Change”, Folia
Linguistica Historica, 6: 5-26. Weinreich, Ulrich.,
Labov, William. & Herzog, Marvin. 1968. "Empirical Foundations for a
Theory of Language Change”, in W.P.Lehmann & Y.Malkiel (eds), Directions for Historical Linguistics,
Austin, 95-188. |