- Source: New Ways of Analyzing Variation Asia-Pacific
New Ways of Analyzing Variation Asia-Pacific (often shortened to NWAV Asia-Pacific or NWAV-AP) is a biennial academic conference in sociolinguistics and the first sister conference of New Ways of Analyzing Variation. NWAV Asia-Pacific focuses on research based on empirical data with an emphasis on quantitative analysis of variation and change across the Asia-Pacific region, including speech communities, multilingualism, urbanization and migration, sociophonetics, style-shifting, language contact, variation in minority languages, dialect variation and change, dialect contact, variation in acquisition, language change across the lifespan, perceptual dialectology, and other related topics such as technological resources for sociolinguistic research. The first NWAV Asia-Pacific conference was held at University of Delhi, India in February, 2011, which included an inaugural conference address by William Labov.
The NWAV Asia/Pacific conference series has also led to the founding of a new peer-reviewed journal focused on language variation and change in this region:
Asia-Pacific Language Variation (Benjamins Publishing).
Past conferences
See also
New Ways of Analyzing Variation
Researching language variation and change
Dialectology
Linguistics conferences
Sociolinguistics
Variable rules analysis
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- New Ways of Analyzing Variation Asia-Pacific
- New Ways of Analyzing Variation
- Variation (linguistics)
- Peopling of the Americas
- Race (human categorization)
- Black people
- Indigenous peoples of the Americas
- Social simulation
- Haplogroup N-M231
- Europe