This Year’s Strides and Goodbyes in the Socio Lab

This academic year saw remarkable growth for the Sociolinguistics Lab. In addition to a new cohort of students, we welcomed a new affiliate professor, Dr. Rose Fisher, who studies (socio)linguistics and language attitudes in Pennsylvania Dutch-speaking communities, as well as two new postdoctoral scholars, Dr. Leah Nodar and Dr. Joel Berends, who work with the lab’s MI Diaries project.

We heard a total of 18 sociolinguistics presentations from grad students and faculty at lab meetings this year, on topics ranging from morphological variation in Swahili to the changing usage of English intensifiers, and seemingly everything in between. Lab members shared their findings with broader communities of linguists at the NWAV, ISLE, LSA, and SECOL conferences.

Sociolinguistically-inclined undergraduates had a rewarding year, too — after conducting original research based on data from the MI Diaries, six students presented their findings at the University Undergraduate Research and Arts Fair (UURAF), with freshman Connor Mason winning a first-place award in the fair’s Linguistics, Languages, and Speech category!

This time of year also comes with the bittersweet necessity that some lab members will be moving on from MSU. Hamlin Teng, who successfully defended his Master’s thesis investigating the phonetics of Mandarin tones in whispered speech across differing communicative contexts, will be starting his linguistics PhD next year at Stony Brook University! We’re also preparing to work up the strength to say farewell to longtime lab member Adam Barnhardt, who’s currently finishing his dissertation on how the meanings of linguistic variants interact with the development of idiolects and the propagation of sound changes.

Thank you to all who contributed to the lab this year. Here’s to the continuation of great work on all facets of language variation!

Continue ReadingThis Year’s Strides and Goodbyes in the Socio Lab

MI Diaries at MSU Science Fest 2026

On April 11th, the Sociolinguistics Lab’s Michigan Diaries Project set up at MSU’s annual Science Festival to talk to the public about sociolinguistics!

In addition to answering people’s questions about language and hyping them up to become participants for the Diaries project, we ran two informal studies throughout the day to gauge changes in time in Michiganders’ preferred terms for a fizzy drink (pop, soda, or other), as well as the realization of Michiganders’ pre-nasal /æ/ vowel (is the vowel in ‘hand’ the same as the one in ‘cap’?)

Professor Betsy Sneller helping visitors add to the Pop vs. Soda chart.
Team member Connor Bechler giving the MI Diaries rundown to a curious prospective participant.
Rush hour at the MI Diaries Science Fest booth.
Continue ReadingMI Diaries at MSU Science Fest 2026

Michigan State Presenting at LSA 2026

Five MSU linguists (including Sociolinguistics Lab members Mofart Ayiega & Leah Nodar) will be presenting their work at the Linguistics Society of America’s annual conference, taking place this year in New Orleans from January 8th – 11th!

Please find their talk titles below:

  • Mofart Ayiega (co-authored with Dr. Suzanne Wagner) – Morphological Leveling of Noun Class Agreement in Urban Swahili
  • Dr. Leah Nodar – Twelve Variables of Africatown English in 1927 and 1979
  • Jingying Xu (co-authored with Dr. Cristina Schmitt):
    • Beyond Truth Conditions: Context Modulates Telicity Interpretation
    • Learning Telicity in Context: Developmental Evidence from Mandarin Children
  • Ellie Xia (co-authored with Dr. Alan Hezao Ke) – Tonal Marking of Telicity in Hakka: An Agree-Based Analysis
  • John Ryan (co-authored with Yaxuan Wang) – Reference, Aspect, and Event Completion in Mandarin Sentence Judgments

Click ‘Continue Reading’ for abstracts.

Continue ReadingMichigan State Presenting at LSA 2026

MSU Linguists Presenting at NWAV 53

This November, Adam Barnhardt, Mofart Ayiega, Rose Fisher, Jess Shepherd, Connor Bechler, Annan Kirk, and Karthik Durvasula will be presenting at NWAV 53 (New Ways of Analyzing Variation) at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor!

  • Adam will be presenting “Creaky voice: A women-led sub/exurban-centric sound change in white Michigan English
  • Mofart will be presenting “Morphological Non-agreement on Animate Nouns in Swahili
  • Rose will be presenting “Language Loyalty and Maintenance: The Case of Pennsylvania Dutch
  • Jess will be presenting “Paths of sound change in the [mɪɾən]: /tən/ in two varieties of Michigan English”
  • Connor will be presenting “Modeling and Documenting Variation across Pumi Varieties
  • Annan Kirk will be presenting “Really is really frequent: intensifiers and change in Michigan English
  • Karthik will be presenting “Near mergers are compatible with categorical representations”

NWAV 53 will run from Nov. 5th – 7th. Register here.

Click ‘Continue Reading’ for abstracts.

Continue ReadingMSU Linguists Presenting at NWAV 53

New Post-Doctoral Researchers

MSU Linguistics recently hired two new post-docs, Leah Nodar and Joel Berends, to work with the MI Diaries project.

Welcome, Leah & Joel!

Leah Nodar is a Visiting Research Scholar in the Department of Linguistics, Languages, and Cultures. She is a postdoctoral researcher in linguistics on the MI Diaries project. Her research interests include dialect development, network analysis of discourse, and the role of personal investment in a social identity on language continuity and change.

Joel Berends works with the MI Diaries project and as an Assistant Professor of Teacher Education at MSU. His work involves youth who are interested in pursuing careers in education as part of MSU’s Community Teachers Program. His scholarship includes work with African and Asian immigrant youth, museum and cultural studies, diasporic literacies, discourse analysis, sports, poetry, and arts-based research and methodologies. His teaching, research, and community-engagement directly include youth in determining and deliberating curriculum, career pathways, and futures for learning communities.

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