(2020) From
Bidialectal to Bilingual: Evidence for two-stage language shift in Lester W. J. ‘Smoky’ Seifert’s 1946–1949 Wisconsin German
Recordings. American
Speech, 95(4), 485–523. 10.1215/00031283‑8620496
Bousquette, J., Eide, K. M., Hjelde, A. & Putnam, M. T.
(2021) Competition
at the left edge: Left-dislocation vs. topicalization in Heritage
Germanic, InA. Hjelde & Å. Søfteland (Eds.), Proceedings
of the 10th Workshop on Immigrant Languages in the Americas (WILA
10), pp. 11–21. Cascadilla.
(2022) (Ed.). The
Verticalization Model of language shift: The great change in American communities. Oxford
University Press. 10.1093/oso/9780198864639.001.0001
(2019) Postvernacular
Dutch in Wisconsin. InK. Biers & J. R. Brown (Eds.), Selected
Proceedings of the 9th Workshop on Immigrant Languages in the Americas (WILA
9) (pp. 72–82). Cascadilla.
(2015) Functional
convergence and extension in contact: Syntactic and semantic attributes of the progressive aspect in Pennsylvania
Dutch. InJ. B. Johannessen & J. C. Salmons (Eds.), Germanic
Heritage Languages in North America: Acquisition, attrition, and
change, pp. 135–160. John
Benjamins. 10.1075/silv.18.06bro
(2022) The
Stop Contrast of Bernese in Misiones and Ohio – a Synchronic and Diachronic
Analysis. Unpublished PhD dissertation, The Pennsylvania
State University.
Kupisch, T.
(2020) Towards
modelling heritage speakers’ sound systems. Bilingualism: Language and
Cognition, 23(1), 29–30. 10.1017/S1366728919000385
(2013) What’s
so incomplete about incomplete acquisition?: A prolegomenon to modeling heritage language
grammars. Linguistic Approaches to
Bilingualism, 3(4), 478–508. 10.1075/lab.3.4.04put
(2022) The
last stages of language shift and verticalization: Comparative upper Midwestern
data. InK. Biers & J. R. Brown (Eds.), Selected
Proceedings of the 11th Workshop on Immigrant Languages in the Americas (WILA
11), 71–78. Cascadilla.
(2015) Sociolinguistic
and syntactic variation in Wisconsin German narratives. InB. R. Page & M. T. Putnam (Eds.), Moribund
Germanic Heritage Languages in North America: Theoretical perspectives and empirical
findings (pp. 224–250). Brill.