Update: February 24, 2023 The new version of Termout.org is now online, so this web site is now obsolete and will soon be dismantled. |
subject pronoun |
: 7. Bentivoglio, P. (1980). Why "canto" and not "yo canto"? The problem of first person subject pronoun in spoken Venezuelan Spanish (Tesis de maestría no publicada). University of California, Los Angeles. : Abreu, L. (2012). Subject Pronoun Expression and Priming Effects among Bilingual Speakers of Puerto Rican Spanish. In K. Geeslin & M. Díaz-Campos (Eds.), Selected Proceedings of the 14^th Hispanic Linguistics Symposium (pp. 1-8). Cascadilla Proceedings Project. : Alfaraz, G. G. (2015). Variation of Overt and Null Subject Pronouns in the Spanish of Santo Domingo. En A. M. Carvalho, R. Orozco, & N. L. Shin (Eds.), Subject Pronoun Expression in Spanish: A Cross-Dialectal Perspective (pp. 3-16). Washington D. C.: George Town University Press. : Carvalho, A. M., Orozco, R., & Shin, N. L. (eds). (2015). Subject Pronoun Expression in Spanish: A Cross-dialectal Perspective. Georgetown University Press. : Carvalho, A.M., & Child, M. (2011). Subject Pronoun Expression in a Variety of Spanish in Contact with Portuguese. In J. Michnowicz & R. Dodsworth (Eds.), Selected Proceedings of the 5^th Workshop on Spanish Sociolinguistics(pp. 14-25). Cascadilla Proceedings Project. : Carvalho, A.M., Orozco, R., & Shin, N. (Eds.). (2015). Subject Pronoun Expression in Spanish: A Cross-Dialectal Perspective. Georgetown University Press. : Lastra, Y. y P. Martín Butragueño (2015), “Subject pronoun expression in oral Mexican Spanish”, en A. M. Carvalho et al. (eds.), Subject pronoun expression in Spanish. A Cross-Dialectal Perspective, Washington, Georgetown University Press, pp. 39-57. : Limerick, P.P. (2020). First-person plural subject pronoun expression in Mexican Spanish spoken in Georgia. Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics. : Michnowicz, J. (2015). Subject Pronoun Expression in Contact with Maya in Yucatan Spanish. In A.M. Carvalho, R. Orozco & N. Shin (Eds.), Subject Pronoun Expression in Spanish: A Cross-Dialectal Perspective (pp. 101-119). Georgetown University Press. : Orozco, R. (2016). Subject pronoun expression in Mexican Spanish: ¿Qué pasa en Xalapa? In Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America, 1, 1-15. Doi: 10.3765/plsa.v1i0.3703. : Posio, P. (2011). Spanish subject pronoun usage and verb semantics revisited. Journal of Pragmatics, 43, 777-798. : Posio, P. (2011). Spanish subject pronoun usage and verb semantics revisited: First and second person singular subject pronouns and focusing of attention in spoken Peninsular Spanish. Journal of Pragmatics, 43(3), 777-798. doi: 10.1016/j.pragma.2010.10.012. : Shin, N., & Otheguy, R. (2013). Social class and gender impacting change in bilingual settings: Spanish subject pronoun use in New York. Language in Society, 42(4), 429-452. Doi: 10.1017/S0047404513000468. : Shin, N., & Van Buren, J. (2016). Maintenance of Spanish subject pronoun expression patterns among bilingual children of farmworkers in Washington/Montana. Spanish in Context, 13(2), 173-194. Doi: 10.1075/sic.13.2.01shi. : Silva-Corvalán, C. (2015). The Acquisition of Grammatical Subjects by Spanish-English Bilinguals. In Carvalho, A. M., Orozco, R., & Lapidus Shin, N. (eds.), Subject Pronoun Expression in Spanish: A Cross-dialectal Perspective (pp. 211-229). Georgetown University Press. : Ávila-Jiménez, B. (1996). Subject Pronoun Expression in Puerto Rican Spanish: A Sociolinguistic Morphological, and Discourse Analysis (Ph.D. dissertation). Cornell University, United States of America. |