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Original Articles

The effects of Negro and White dialectal variations upon attitudes of college students

Pages 181-186 | Published online: 02 Jun 2009

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Robert M. McKenzie, Patchanok Kitikanan & Phaisit Boriboon. (2016) The competence and warmth of Thai students’ attitudes towards varieties of English: the effect of gender and perceptions of L1 diversity. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 37:6, pages 536-550.
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Brendan Norman & Daniel Bennett. (2014) Are mobile phone conversations always so annoying? The ‘need-to-listen’ effect re-visited. Behaviour & Information Technology 33:12, pages 1294-1305.
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Ying Ying Tan. (2012) Age as a factor in ethnic accent identification in Singapore. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 33:6, pages 569-587.
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Aaron Castelan Cargile, Jiro Takai & JoséI. Rodríguez. (2006) Attitudes Toward African–American Vernacular English: A US Export to Japan?. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 27:6, pages 443-456.
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MarkP. Orbe. (1995) African American communication research: Toward a deeper understanding of interethnic communication. Western Journal of Communication 59:1, pages 61-78.
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Carolyn Anderson, MarleneG. Fine & FernL. Johnson. (1983) Black talk on television: A constructivist approach to viewers’ perceptions of Bev in Roots II. . Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 4:2-3, pages 181-195.
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Carolyn Calloway‐Thomas & RaymondG. Smith. (1981) Images of leadership: Black vs. White. Southern Speech Communication Journal 46:3, pages 263-277.
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JamesJ. Bradac, JohnA. Courtright, Gregson Schmidt & RobertA. Davies. (1976) The Effects of Perceived Status and Linguistic Diversity Upon Judgments of Speaker Attributes and Message Effectiveness. The Journal of Psychology 93:2, pages 213-220.
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Gary L. Hull. (1975) Racial Implications for the Design of Instructional Materials. The Journal of Educational Research 69:2, pages 47-52.
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E. Hope Bock & JamesH. Pitts. (1975) The effect of three levels of black dialect on perceived speaker image. The Speech Teacher 24:3, pages 218-225.
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Howard Giles, Richard Bourhis, Alan Lewis & Peter Trudgill. (1974) The imposed norm hypothesis: A validation. Quarterly Journal of Speech 60:4, pages 405-410.
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Gay Lumsden, DelindusR. Brown, Donald Lumsden & TimothyA. Hill. (1974) An investigation of differences in verbal behavior between black and white informal peer group discussions. Today's Speech 22:4, pages 31-36.
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Brenda Bochner & ArthurP. Bochner. (1973) The effects of social status and social dialect on listener responses. Central States Speech Journal 24:2, pages 75-82.
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H. Thomas Hurt & CarlH. Weaver. (1972) Negro dialect, ethnocentricism, and the distortion of information in the communicative process. Central States Speech Journal 23:2, pages 118-125.
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Articles from other publishers (17)

Erik R. Thomas. (2011) Sociolinguistic variables and cognition. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science 2:6, pages 701-716.
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Katie Drager. (2010) Sociophonetic Variation in Speech Perception. Language and Linguistics Compass 4:7, pages 473-480.
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Andrew C. Billings. (2016) Beyond the Ebonics Debate. Journal of Black Studies 36:1, pages 68-81.
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Erik R. Thomas & Jeffrey Reaser. (2004) Delimiting perceptual cues used for the ethnic labeling of African American and European American voices. Journal of Sociolinguistics 8:1, pages 54-87.
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ERIK R. THOMAS. (2002) SOCIOPHONETIC APPLICATIONS OF SPEECH PERCEPTION EXPERIMENTS. American Speech 77:2, pages 115-147.
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Aaron Castelan Cargile & James J. Bradac. (2001) Chapter 10: Attitudes Toward Language: A Review of Speaker-Evaluation Research and a General Process Model. Communication Yearbook 25:1, pages 347-382.
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AARON CASTELAN CARGILE. (2011) Evaluations of Employment Suitability: Does Accent Always Matter?. Journal of Employment Counseling 37:3, pages 165-177.
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S.M. Ketrow. (1990) Attributes of a telemarketer's voice and persuasiveness. Journal of Direct Marketing 4:3, pages 7-21.
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Ming Singer & Greg S. Eder. (1989) Effects of Ethnicity, Accent, and Job Status on Selection Decisions. International Journal of Psychology 24:1-5, pages 13-34.
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MIRIAM R. EISENSTEIN. (2007) Target language variation and second‐language acquisition: learning English in New York City. World Englishes 5:1, pages 31-46.
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Michael D. Linn & Gene Piché. 1986. Dialect and Language Variation. Dialect and Language Variation 574 590 .
Miriam Eisenstein. (2006) A STUDY OF SOCIAL VARIATION IN ADULT SECOND LANGUAGE AQUISITION. Language Learning 32:2, pages 367-391.
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Harold V. B. Gilliam & Sjef Van Den Berg. (2016) Different Levels of Eye Contact. Urban Education 15:1, pages 83-92.
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Ruth Beckey Irwin. (2016) Judgments of Vocal Quality, Speech Fluency, and Confidence of Southern Black and White Speakers. Language and Speech 20:3, pages 261-266.
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Diane N. Bryen & Nettie R. Bartel. (1973) The disadvantaged as a social and professional phenomenon. Journal of School Psychology 11:4, pages 387-401.
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Frederick Williams. 1970. Language and Poverty. Language and Poverty 380 399 .
Roger W. Shuy. 1970. Language and Poverty. Language and Poverty 335 350 .

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