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Adams Smith, Diana. 1993. Teenage slang in New Zealand. New Zealand English Newsletter 7: 25-28.

Ainsworth, Helen. 1992. The mark of possession or possession’s mark? A case study. New Zealand English Newsletter 6: 17-20.

Ainsworth, Helen. 1994. The emergence of the high rising terminal contour in the speech of New Zealand children. Te Reo 37: 3-2

Algeo, John. 1992. New Zealand English and the dictionary. In Claudia Blank (ed.), Language and civilization: a concerted profusion of essays and studies in honour of Otto Hietsch. Frankfurt-on-Main. Peter Lang Publishers. 209-219.

Allan, W. Scott. 1990. The rise of New Zealand intonation. In Bell and Holmes (eds): 115-128.

Allan, W. Scott and Donna Starks. 2000. ‘No-one sounds like us?’ A comparison of New Zealand and other southern hemisphere Englishes. In Bell and Kuiper (eds): 53-83.

Andersen, Johannes C. 1934. Place-names in New Zealand: rules of nomenclature and list of names approved, or changed, or expunged, by the Honorary Geographic Board of New Zealand. Wellington. The Polynesian Society (Inc.).

Andersen, Johannes C. 1946. Maori words incorporated into the English language. Journal of the Polynesian society 55.2: 141-162 (June 1946).

Anderson, L. & R. Aitken. 1965. A study of the speech and idiom of Maori children in the Western Bay of Plenty. New Zealand Council for Educational Research. Mount Maunganui College and Auckland Post-Primary Teachers’ College.

Baker, Sidney J. 1941. New Zealand slang: a dictionary of colloquialisms. Christchurch. Whitcombe and Tombs. (undated in original; Preface dated 1935-40.)

Baker, Sidney J. 1945. Origins of the words pakeha and maori. Journal of the Polynesian Society 54.4: 223-231 (December 1945).

Barham, I.H. 1965. The English vocabulary and sentence structure of Maori children. Wellington. New Zealand Council for Educational Research. (Educational Research Series, no. 43.)

Barratt, Alexandra (ed.). 1991. The New Zealand Oxford School dictionary. Auckland. Oxford University Press.

Bartlett, Chris. 1992. Regional variation in New Zealand English: the case of Southland. New Zealand English Newsletter 6: 5-15.

Batterham, Margaret. 1993. Attitudes to New Zealand English. New Zealand English Newsletter 7: 5-24.

Batterham, Margaret. 2000. The apparent merger of the front centring diphthongs - EAR and AIR - in New Zealand English. In Bell and Kuiper (eds): 111-145.

Bauer, Laurie. 1979. The second Great Vowel Shift? Journal of the International Phonetic Association 9.2: 57-66.

Bauer, Laurie. 1980. Something old, something new, something borrowed: an essay on loanwords. In David Norton & Roger Robinson (eds), Views of English 2: Victoria University essays for English teachers and students. Wellington. Department of English, Victoria University of Wellington. 19-27 (esp. 24-27).

Bauer, Laurie. 1982a. That vowel shift again. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 12.1: 48-49.

Bauer, Laurie. 1982b. Unnatural phonology in English. Te Reo 25: 13-22 (esp. 14-15).

Bauer, Laurie. 1984. Perspectives on words. Views of English 3. Wellington. Department of English, Victoria University of Wellington. (esp. 78-82, Ch.10, ‘What is a New Zealand word?’)

Bauer, Laurie. 1986. Notes on New Zealand English phonetics and phonology. English World-Wide. Amsterdam. John Benjamins B.V. 7.2: 225-258.

Bauer, Laurie. 1987a. Approaching the grammar of New Zealand English. New Zealand English Newsletter 1: 12-15.

Bauer, Laurie. 1987b. New Zealand English morphology: some experimental evidence. Te Reo 30: 37-53.

Bauer, Laurie. 1988. Number agreement with collective nouns in New Zealand English. Australian Journal of Linguistics 8.2: 247-259.

Bauer, Laurie. 1989a. Irregularity in past non-finite verb-forms and A note on the New Zealand weekend. New Zealand English Newsletter 3: 13-16.

Bauer, Laurie. 1989b. Marginal modals in New Zealand English. Te Reo 32: 3-16.

Bauer, Laurie. 1989c. The verb have in New Zealand English. English World-Wide 10.1: 69-83.

Bauer, Laurie. 1991a. New Zild-Strine / Pom = ? In Australia-New Zealand: aspects of a relationship. Proceedings of the Stout Research Centre 8th annual conference. Wellington. Stout Research Centre. (not paginated)

Bauer, Laurie. 1991b. Who speaks New Zealand English? ICE Newsletter 11.

Bauer, Laurie. 1992. The second Great Vowel Shift revisited. English World-Wide 13.2: 253-268.

Bauer, Laurie. 1993a. Manual of information to accompany the Wellington corpus of written New Zealand English. Wellington. Victoria University, Department of Linguistics.

Bauer, Laurie. 1993b. Progress with a corpus of New Zealand English and some early results. In Clive Souter & Eric Atwell (eds), Corpus-based computational linguistics. Amsterdam and Atlanta. Rodopi. 1-10.

Bauer, Laurie. 1994a. English in New Zealand. In Robert Burchfield (ed.), English in Britain and overseas: origins and development (Volume 5 of The Cambridge history of the English language). Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 382-429.

Bauer, Laurie. 1994b. Introducing the Wellington Corpus of Written New Zealand English. Te Reo 37: 21-28.

Bauer, Laurie. 1995. Spelling pronunciation and related matters in New Zealand English. In J. Windsor Lewis (ed.), Studies in general and English phonetics. London. Routledge. 320-325.

Bauer, Laurie. 1996. How much New Zealand English comes from Scottish? Scotia Pacific 1996/1: 14-15.

Bauer, Laurie. 1997. Attempting to trace Scottish influence on New Zealand English. In Edgar. W. Schneider (ed.), Englishes around the World 2: studies in honour of Manfred Görlach. Amsterdam/Philadelphia. John Benjamins Publishing Company. 257-272.

Bauer, Laurie. 1999a. A note on rhyming slang in New Zealand English. New Zealand English Journal 13: 5-7.

Bauer, Laurie 1999b. The origins of the New Zealand English accent. English World-Wide 20. 2: 287-307.

Bauer, Laurie. 2000. The dialectal origins of New Zealand English. In Bell and Holmes (eds): 40-52.

Bauer, Laurie and Winifred Bauer. 2000. Nova Zelandia est omnis divisa in partes tres. New Zealand English Journal 14: 7-17.

Bauer, Laurie and Janet Holmes. 1996. Getting into a flap! /t/ in New Zealand English. World Englishes 15.1: 115-124.

Bauer, Laurie and Lisa Matthewson. 1989. Abstracts of honours projects on the phonetics and phonology of New Zealand English. New Zealand English Newsletter 3: 17-19.

Bauer, Winifred. 1995. The use of Maori words in English (Languages in Contact II). New Zealand Studies 5.2: 19-24.

Bayard, Donn. 1987. Class and change in New Zealand English: a summary report. Te Reo 30: 3-36.

Bayard, Donn. 1988. Variation in and attitudes toward New Zealand English: a quantitative approach. New Zealand English Newsletter 2: 13-16.

Bayard, Donn. 1989. ‘Me say that? No way!’: the social correlates of American lexical diffusion in New Zealand English. Te Reo 32: 17-60.

Bayard, Donn. 1990a. ‘God help us if we all sound like this’: attitudes to New Zealand and other English accents. In Bell and Holmes (eds): 67-96.

Bayard, Donn. 1990b. Minder, Mork and Mindy? (-t) glottalisation and post-vocalic (-r) in younger New Zealand English speakers. In Bell and Holmes (eds): 149-164.

Bayard, Donn. 1991a. Antipodean accents and the ‘cultural cringe’: New Zealand and American attitudes toward New Zealand English and other English accents. Te Reo 34: 15-52.

Bayard, Donn. 1991b. A taste of Kiwi: attitudes to accent, speaker gender, and perceived ethnicity across the Tasman. Australian Journal of Linguistics 11: 1-38.

Bayard, Donn. 1991c. Social constraints on the phonology of New Zealand English. In Jenny Cheshire (ed.), English around the world: sociolinguistic perspectives. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 169-186.

Bayard, Donn. 1995a. Kiwitalk: sociolinguistics and New Zealand society. Palmerston North. Dunmore Press.

Bayard, Donn. 1995b. Peers versus parents: a longitudinal study of rhotic - non-rhotic accommodation in an NZE-speaking child. New Zealand English Newsletter 9: 15-22.

Bayard, Donn. 1998. White turnips and mythical Moriori: combatting folk-linguistic and folk-anthropological myths in the popular press. New Zealand English Journal 12: 6-20.

Bayard, Donn. 1999. Getting in a flap or turning off the tap in Dunedin?: stylistic variation in New Zealand English intervocalic (-t-). English World-Wide 20.1: 125-155.

Bayard, Donn. 2000a. The cultural cringe revisited: changes through time in Kiwi attitudes towards accents. In Bell and Kuiper (eds): 297-324.

Bayard, Donn. 2000b. New Zealand English: origins, relationships, and prospects. Moderna Språk 94: 8-14

Bayard, Donn and Christopher Bartlett. 1996. ‘You must be from Gorre’: Attitudinal effects of Southland rhotic accents and speaker gender on NZE listeners and the question of NZE regional variation. Te Reo 39: 25-45

Beattie, J. Herries. 1947. Early runholding in Otago. Dunedin. Otago Daily Times & Witness Newspapers Co. Ltd. (‘Our legacy from Australia’ 10-11; ‘Using the right expressions’ 11-12; ‘A limited vocabulary’ 12-13.

Bell, Allan. 1982. This isn’t the BBC: colonialism in New Zealand English. Applied Linguistics 3.3: 246-258.

Bell, Allan. 1983. Broadcast news as a language standard. In Gerhard Leitner (ed.), Language and Mass Media (International Journal of the Sociology of Language 40). Amsterdam. Mouton. 29-42.

Bell, Allan. 1985. One rule of news English: geographical, social and historical spread. Te Reo 28: 95-117.

Bell, Allan. 1988. The British base and the American connection in New Zealand media English. American Speech 63.4: 326-344.

Bell, Allan. 1990. Audience and referee design in New Zealand media language. In Bell and Holmes (eds): 165-194.

Bell, Allan. 1991. The politics of English in New Zealand. In McGregor and Williams (eds): 65-75.

Bell, Allan. 1992. Hit and miss: referee design in the dialects of New Zealand television advertisements. Language and Communication 12.3-4: 1-14.

Bell, Allan. 1997a. The phonetics of fish and chips in New Zealand: marking national and ethnic identities. English World-Wide 18.2: 243-270.

Bell, Allan. 1997b. Those short front vowels. New Zealand English Journal 11: 3-13.

Bell, Allan. 2000. Maori and Pakeha English: a case study. In Bell and Kuiper (eds): 221-248

Bell, Allan and Janet Holmes (eds). 1990. New Zealand ways of speaking English. Clevedon, Multilingual Matters; and Wellington, Victoria University Press. (Review by Tony Deverson in English Today 7.3 (July 1991): 52-53.)

Bell, Allan and Janet Holmes. 1991. New Zealand. In Jenny Cheshire (ed.), English around the world: sociolinguistic perspectives. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 153-168.

Bell, Allan and Janet Holmes. 1992. H-droppin’: two sociolinguistic variables in New Zealand English. Australian Journal of Linguistics 12.2: 223-248

Bell, Allan and Koenraad Kuiper (eds). 2000. New Zealand English. Wellington, Victoria University Press; and Amsterdam/Philadephia, John Benjamins. (Varieties of English Around the World G25.

Bellett, Donna. 1995. Hakas, hangis and kiwis: Maµori lexical influence on New Zealand English. Te Reo 38: 73-103

Bennett, J.A.W. 1943. English as it is spoken in New Zealand. American Speech 18: 81-95. Reprinted in Ramson (ed.) 1970: 69-83

Benton, Richard A. 1966. Research into the English language difficulties of Maori school children 1963-1964. Wellington. Maori Education Foundation.

Benton, Richard A. 1978. The sociolinguistic survey of language use in Maori households. Wellington. New Zealand Council for Educational Research.

Benton, Richard A. 1985. Maori, English, and Maori English. In John B. Pride (ed.), Cross-cultural encounters: communication and mis-communication. Melbourne. River Seine Publications. 110-120.

Benton, Richard A. 1991. Maori English: a New Zealand myth? In Jenny Cheshire (ed.), English around the world: sociolinguistic perspectives. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 187-199. Reprinted in New Zealand English Newsletter 6 (1992): 27-35.

Bernard, J.R. 1971. Accent and aspiration (changes in Australian and New Zealand English). The New Zealand Speech Therapists’ Journal 26: 5-11

Britain, David. 1992. Linguistic change in intonation: the use of High Rising Terminals in New Zealand English. Language Variation and Change 4: 77-104.

Britain, David. 2000. As far as analysing grammatical variation and change in New Zealand English with very few tokens <is concerned/ø>. In Bell and Kuiper (eds): 198-220

Britain, David and John Newman. 1992. High rising terminals in New Zealand English. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 22: 1-11

Brooks, Amanda. 1994. American and British influences on phonetic variables in New Zealand rock music. New Zealand English Newsletter 8: 22-30

Brosnahan, L.F. 1966. Notes on / l / in New Zealand English. Proceedings and papers of the 10th AULLA congress: 230-234

Burchfield, Robert W. (ed.). 1969. A supplement of Australian and New Zealand words. In The Pocket Oxford dictionary, 5th edition only. 1017-1048.

Burchfield, Robert W. (ed.). 1972, 1976, 1982, 1986. Supplement to the Oxford English dictionary. London. Oxford University Press.

Burchfield, Robert W. (ed.). 1986. The New Zealand Pocket Oxford dictionary. Auckland. Oxford University Press. (New Zealand English xxii-xxiv, Te Reo Pakeha o Aotearoa xxv-xxvi.) (Reviews by Forrest Scott in New Zealand Listener, 26 April 1986: 46; Tom McArthur in English Today 8: 42-43 (October 1986); Kendrick Smithyman in Te Reo 30 (1987): 129-134. Article by Frances Levy in New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, 5 May 1986: 8-9.) Reprinted with corrections 1990.

Burchfield, Robert W. 1988. Some unedited New Zealand words. In T.L. Burton & Jill Burton (eds), Lexicographical and linguistic studies: essays in honour of G.W. Turner. Cambridge. D.S. Brewer. 185-197.

Burchfield, Robert W. 1989. A northern New Zealand newspaper. English Today 17: 34-37

Burridge, Kate and Jean Mulder. 1998. English in Australia and New Zealand. Melbourne. Oxford University Press

Buzo, Alexander. 1994. Kiwese: a guide, a ductionary, a shearing of unsights. Port Melbourne, Victoria. Reed Books Australia. (A Strine-like Aussie view of NZE.

Cameron, Jim. 1999. New Zealand English at Law. NZWords 2.1: 1-2.

 

Campbell, Elizabeth and Elizabeth Gordon. 1996. ‘What do you fink?’ Is New Zealand English losing its ‘th’? New Zealand English Journal 10: 40-46.

 

Clark, Ross. Pidgin English and Pidgin Maori in New Zealand. In Bell and Holmes (eds): 97-114.

 

Coleridge, K.A. 1966. New Zealand English: a preliminary checklist. New Zealand Library School.

 

Collins Contemporary Dictionary: Australian and New Zealand edition. 1965. London. Collins. (Supplement includes ‘a selective dictionary of Australian and New Zealand words and terms’: 610-629.) (Also published as The New Zealand Contemporary Dictionary. 1966. Christchurch. Whitcombe & Tombs Ltd.) (Supplement derives from the Australasian Universal Dictionary. 1962. Sydney. Collins.)

Collins New Zealand School Dictionary. 1999. Glasgow. HarperCollins. (New Zealand editor Elizabeth Gordon)

 

Corne, Chris. 1998. The —er ‘processive’ suffix and You little bottler! New Zealand English Journal 12: 21-24.

 

Crystal, David. 1995. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language. Cambridge University Press. (New Zealand: 99, New Zealand English: 354-355)

 

Daley, Claudia and Martin Lutterjohann (eds). 1994. Kiwi-Slang, das Englisch Neuseelands. 2nd edition. Bielefeld (Germany). P. Rump. 104p.

 

Davy, Derek. 1985. New Zealand English. In J. Khan (ed.), The right word at the right time: a guide to the English language and how to use it. London. Reader’s Digest Association. 378-380.

Davy, Derek. 1986. Implications of the emergence of new standards of English for the writing of English grammars. In Gerhard Leitner (ed.), The English reference grammar: language and linguistics, writers and readers. Tübingen. Max Niemeyer Verlag. 178-189.

Davy, Derek. 1988. Surveying New Zealand English. New Zealand English Newsletter 2: 4-8.

 

Dear, I.C.B. 1986. Oxford English. Oxford University Press. (English overseas: Australia and New Zealand: 272-274, by E.S.C. Weiner - from Weiner (1983).)

 

Delbridge, A. (editor-in-chief) 1981. (New Zealand 1983.) The Macquarie Dictionary. McMahons Point, NSW. Macquarie Pty Ltd. (review by Tony Deverson in New Zealand Listener, 21 January 1984: 30.) (also Concise and Budget editions.) Second edition 1991. Third edition 1997.

Delbridge, A. (general editor) 1986. The Penguin Tasman Dictionary: an international dictionary for all New Zealanders. Auckland. Penguin Books. (New Zealand consulting editor: H.W. Orsman) (Introduction ‘English by the Tasman’ by J.R.L. Bernard. vi-vii.; otherwise as Concise Macquarie.) (review by Tony Deverson in New Zealand Listener, 11 April 1987: 61.)

 

Deverson, Tony. 1981. New Zealand words and usages. In A.J. Deverson & K. Kuiper, Guidance notes on vocabulary change. Sixth and Seventh Form English: Bulletin no. 60. Form Seven English: Supplement no. 10. Wellington. Department of Education. D.254-D.267.

Deverson, Tony. 1985. ‘Home Loans’: Maori input into current New Zealand English. English in New Zealand 33:4-10.

Deverson, Tony. 1988a. A bibliography of writings on New Zealand English. New Zealand English Newsletter 2: 17-25.

Deverson, Tony. 1988b. The pronunciation of Maori words in New Zealand English. In Occasional Papers in Language and Linguistics. Christchurch. University of Canterbury. Number 1: 25-31.

Deverson, Tony. 1990a. Considering Kiwi: a survey of teachers’ attitudes to New Zealand English. New Zealand English Newsletter 4: 10-15.

Deverson, Tony. 1990b. ‘Criticising New Zealand speech unkindly’: attitudes to New Zealand English. British Review of New Zealand Studies 3: 65-75.

Deverson, Tony. 1990c. Maori and Pakeha updated: cultural sensitivity and the Heinemann New Zealand Dictionary. English in Aotearoa 13: 36-42.

Deverson, Tony. 1990d. ‘Woman’s constancy’: a distinctive zero plural in New Zealand English. Te Reo 33: 43-56.

Deverson, Tony. 1991. New Zealand English lexis: the Maori dimension. English Today 26: 18-25.

Deverson, Tony. 1992. Harmonies and disharmonies in judgements of New Zealand speech. New Zealand English Newsletter 6: 21-26.

Deverson, Tony. 1994a. An updated bibliography of writings on New Zealand English. New Zealand English Newsletter 8: 31-43.

Deverson, Tony. 1994b. New Zealand English past and present. Introduction to Orsman and Orsman: vi-xxviii.

Deverson, Tony (ed.). 1995. The New Zealand Oxford School Dictionary, 2nd edition. Auckland. Oxford University Press.

Deverson, Tony. 1996. New Zealand English lexis. In Wurm, Stephen A., Mühlhäusler, Peter and Tryon, Darrell T. (eds), Atlas of languages of intercultural communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas. Berlin and New York, Mouton de Gruyter. Vol. II.1: 159-165.

Deverson, Tony. 1997a. New Zealand English. In Penny Griffith, Keith Maslen, and Ross Harvey (eds), Book and Print in New Zealand: a guide to print culture in Aotearoa. Wellington, Victoria University Press. 22-26.

Deverson, Tony (ed.). 1997b. The New Zealand Pocket Oxford Dictionary (2nd edition). Auckland. Oxford University Press.

Deverson, Tony. 1998a. New Zealand English (in New Zealand literature). In Roger Robinson and Nelson Wattie (eds), The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature. Auckland. Oxford University Press. 395-398.

Deverson, Tony (ed.) 1998b. The New Zealand Oxford Paperback Dictionary. Auckland. Oxford University Press.

Deverson, Tony. 1999. Sporting new labels. NZWords 2.1: 5.

Deverson, Tony (ed.). 1999. The New Zealand Oxford Minidictionary. Auckland. Oxford University Press.

Deverson, Tony. 2000a. Handling New Zealand English Lexis. In Bell and Kuiper (eds): 23-39.

Deverson, Tony. 2000b. A revised bibliography of writings on New Zealand English. New Zealand English Journal 14: 18-33.

 

Dunlop, Anna. 1979. English down under. Logophile: the Cambridge Journal of Words and Language. 3.1: 23-25.

Eagleson, R.D. 1966. The ramification of Australian and New Zealand English. Southerly 26: 199-208.

Eagleson, R.D. 1982. English in Australia and New Zealand. In R.W. Bailey & M. Görlach (eds), English as a world language. Ann Arbor, Michigan. University of Michigan Press. 415-438.

 

Ellis, Alexander J. 1889. On Early English Pronunciation. Volume 5. Trübner and Co. (Australasian South Eastern (incorporating material supplied by Samuel McBurney): 236-248.)

 

Fromkin, V., R. Rodman, P. Collins, & D. Blair. 1990. An introduction to language (Second Australian edition). Sydney. Holt, Rinehart & Winston. (The New Zealand English Dialect: 251-252.) (257-258 in first Australian edition 1984.) (Now in a 4th Australian edition, Harcourt, 1999; Fromkin, Blair, Collins; New Zealand English 406-7.

Geering, Elaine. 1993. The use of Maori in the late nineteenth-century Auckland press. In Laurie Bauer & Christine Franzen (eds), Of Pavlova, Poetry and Paradigms: Essays in Honour of Harry Orsman. Wellington. Victoria University Press. 250-260

Gibbs, Helen M. 1994. ‘To lux or to vacuum?’ - accommodation of Southland dialect speakers in a New Zealand English environment. New Zealand English Newsletter 8: 18-21

Glauser, B., E. Schneider and M. Görlach. 1993. A new bibliography of writings on varieties of English, 1984-1992/3. Amsterdam/Philadelphia. John Benjamins. (New Zealand entries in Part IV: The Rest of the World.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1982. The study of New Zealand English. SPAN 14 (April 1982): 39-43 .

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1983a. New Zealand English pronunciation: an investigation into some early written records. Te Reo 26: 29-42.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1983b. The flood of impure vocalisation: a study of attitudes towards New Zealand speech. The New Zealand speech-language therapists’ journal 38:16-29.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1984. New Zealand speech and a New Zealand identity. Working papers on language and schooling. International federation for the teaching of English. (International seminar: ‘Language, schooling and society’, Michigan State University, November 1984.)

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1987. Spoken English data. New Zealand English Newsletter 1: 9.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1988. New Zealand English and the New Zealand Listener. New Zealand English Newsletter 2: 9-12.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1989. That colonial twang: New Zealand speech and New Zealand identity. In D. Novitz and W. Willmott (eds), Culture and identity in New Zealand. Wellington. Government Printer Books. 77-90.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1991a. New Zealand speech and New Zealand society. Spoken English: Journal of the International English Speaking Board 24.3: 13-16.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1991b. Research into the origins of New Zealand speech. New Zealand English Newsletter 5: 11-12.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1991c. The development of spoken English in New Zealand. In McGregor and Williams (eds): 19-28.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1992. Finding their own voice: the evolution of New Zealand English. In Claudia Blank (ed.), Language and civilization: a concerted profusion of essays and studies in honour of Otto Hietsch. Frankfurt-on-Main. Peter Lang Publishers. 198-208.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1994a. New Zealand speech: a suitable subject for the classroom. English in Aotearoa 24: 86-92.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1994b. Reconstructing the past: written and spoken evidence of early New Zealand speech. New Zealand English Newsletter 8: 5-10.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1996. New Zealand English: Speech. In Wurm, Stephen A., Mühlhäusler, Peter and Tryon, Darrell T. (eds), Atlas of languages of intercultural communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas. Berlin and New York, Mouton de Gruyter. Vol. II.1: 153-157.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1997. Exploring variation in New Zealand language. English in Aotearoa 33: 5-11.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1998a. Anythink or nothink: a lazy variant or an ancient treasure? New Zealand English Journal 12: 25-33.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1998b. Embryonic variants in New Zealand English sound changes. Te Reo 41: 62-68.

Gordon, Elizabeth. 1998c. The origins of New Zealand speech: the limits of recovering historical information from written records. English World-Wide 19.1: 61-85

Gordon, Elizabeth and Marcia Abell. 1990. ‘This objectionable colonial dialect’: historical and contemporary attitudes to New Zealand speech. In Bell and Holmes (eds): 21-48

Gordon, Elizabeth and Andrew Carstairs. 1989. English and Maori: some background comments on the first language topic in the proposed new English syllabus for 6th and 7th forms. New Zealand English Newsletter 3: 9-12

Gordon, Elizabeth and Tony Deverson. 1985. New Zealand English: an introduction to New Zealand speech and usage. Auckland. Heinemann. (Review in English World-Wide 7:2 (1986): 349-350.)

Gordon, Elizabeth and Tony Deverson. 1989. Finding a New Zealand voice: attitudes towards English used in New Zealand. Auckland. New House Publishers. (Review, and note on audiotape accompanying the book, in English in Aotearoa 11 (May 1990): 37-39; review by Richard Wakely in British Review of New Zealand Studies 4 (1991): 104-105.)

Gordon, Elizabeth and Tony Deverson. 1998. New Zealand English and English in New Zealand. Auckland. New House Publishers. (Audiotape available) (Review by Manfred Görlach in English World-Wide 19.2 (1998): 316-317

Gordon, Elizabeth and Margaret A. Maclagan. 1985. A study of the /i´/ - /e´/ contrast in New Zealand English. The New Zealand Speech-Language Therapists’ Journal 40.2: 16-26.

Gordon, Elizabeth and Margaret A. Maclagan. 1989. Beer and bear, cheer and chair: a longitudinal study of the ear/air contrast in New Zealand English. Australian Journal of Linguistics 9: 203-220.

Gordon, Elizabeth and Margaret A. Maclagan. 1990. A longitudinal study of the ‘ear/air’ contrast in New Zealand speech. In Bell and Holmes (eds): 129-148.

Gordon, Elizabeth and Margaret A. Maclagan. 1995. Making a virtue of necessity: combining teaching and research in the study of New Zealand English. New Zealand English Newsletter 9: 27-31

Gordon, Elizabeth and Peter Trudgill. 1999. Shades of things to come: embryonic variants in New Zealand English sound changes. English World-Wide 20.1: 111-124

Gordon, Elizabeth and Mark Williams. 1998. Raids on the articulate: code-switching, style-switching and post-colonial writing. The Journal of Commonwealth Literature. 33.2: 75-96

Gordon, Ian A. 1979. In praise of New Zealand English. Reader’s Digest. February 1979: 23-26.

Gordon, Ian A. 1980. A word in your ear. Auckland. Heinemann Educational Books. (Esp. Introduction 1-9.)

Gordon, Ian A. (ed.) 1982. New Collins concise English dictionary. Auckland. Collins. (New Zealand edition) (Pronunciation of English in New Zealand xvi, New Zealand English xvii-xix.) (review by Forrest Scott in New Zealand Listener, 20 August 1983: 100-101.)

Gordon, Ian A. (ed.) 1985. The Collins New Zealand compact English dictionary. (New Zealand English viii-xii.) (review by Forrest Scott in New Zealand Listener 26 April 1986: 46.)

Gordon, Ian A. 1988. British regional survivals in New Zealand English. In T.L. Burton & Jill Burton (eds), Lexicographical and linguistic studies: essays in honour of G.W. Turner. Cambridge. D.S. Brewer. 179-184. Reprinted in New Zealand English Newsletter 3 (1989): 5-8

Gordon, Pamela. 1997. What New Zealanders believe about regional variation in New Zealand English: a folklinguistic investigation. New Zealand English Journal 11: 14-25

Gray, Douglas. 1983. Captain Cook and the English vocabulary. In E.G. Stanley and Douglas Gray (eds), Five hundred years of words and sounds: a festschrift for Eric Dobson. Cambridge. D.S. Brewer. 49-62

Haggo, D.C. 1984. Transcribing New Zealand English vowels. Te Reo 27: 63-67.

Haggo, D.C. and K. Kuiper. 1985. Stock auction speech in Canada and New Zealand. In R. Berry, J. Acheson (eds), Regionalism and national identity: multidisciplinary essays on Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Christchurch. Association for Canadian Studies in Australia and New Zealand. 189-197

Hansen, Elizabeth. 1986. Parlez-vous Kiwi? Pacific Way (August-September 1986): 46-47

Hargreaves, R.P. 1977. Bawbees, bobs and bucks. The New Zealand Numismatic Journal 14.3: 15-17 (October 1977)

Harper, Melissa. 1993. The language of New Zealand First World War diaries. In Laurie Bauer & Christine Franzen (eds), Of Pavlova, Poetry and Paradigms: Essays in honour of Harry Orsman. Wellington. Victoria University Press. 243-249

Hawkins, P.R. 1972. Restricted codes and Maori English. New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies 7: 59-68.

Hawkins, P.R. 1973a. A phonemic transcription system for New Zealand English. Te Reo 16:15-21.

Hawkins, P.R. 1973b. The sound patterns of New Zealand English. Proceedings of the 15th AULLA conference. Sydney. 13.1-13.8.

Hawkins, P.R. n.d. The New Zealand accent and its role in the analysis of some phonological problems of English. (?1975.)

Hawkins, P.R. 1976. The role of NZ English in a binary feature analysis of English short vowels. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 6.2: 50-66.

Hawkins, P.R. 1978. The pronunciation of English in New Zealand. set 78 (research information for teachers): number 1, item 5. Wellington. New Zealand Council for Educational Research

Hay, Jennifer. 1995. ‘Only teasing’. New Zealand English Newsletter 9: 32-35

Hayward, N. and T. Hayward. 1976. New Zealandeze: a traveller’s guide to the Kiwi language. Nelson. Hayward Publications

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The information on this page was provided on 20 October 2000.
The author of this page is:

Tony Deverson