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Mexican Spanish
The Impact of the Mexican Revolution on Spanish in the United States∗
Was the Taco Invented in Southern California?
Toward a Comprehensive Model For
“Spanglish,” Using Spanish and English in the Same Conversation, Can Be Traced Back in Modern Times to the Middle of the 19Th Century
The Puzzling Case of Chabacano: Creolization, Substrate, Mixing and Secondary Contact
Maya and Nahuatl in the Teaching of Spanish
Historical, Socio-Cultural, and Conceptual Issues to Consider When Researching Mexican American Children and Families, and Other Latino Subgroups*
Common Questions About Nahuatl Page 1 of 4
Mexicans in New Mexico: Deconstructing the Tri-Cultural Trope
Defining Spanglish: a Linguistic Categorization of Spanish-English Code-Switching in the United States Leah Mernaugh Seattle Pacific Nu Iversity
Mexican Food Culture: White Appropriation in Post-World War II Southern California
Downloaded the Photography of the Subcomandante Marcos from the Internet
Seventeenth-Century Spanish Colonial Identity in New Mexico: a Study of Identity Practices Through Material Culture
Indigenous Influence
Mexican Spanish in Houston, Texas: a Study of Language Contact and Its Effects on Overt Subject Pronouns
Nahuatl: the Influence of Spanish on the Language of the Aztecs
A Panorama of Traditional New Mexican Spanish
Philippine Creole Spanish): a Comparative Perspective
Top View
Hispanics And/Or Latinos in the United States: the Social Construction of an Identity
A Linguistic Analysis of Spanglish: Relating Language to Identity
Green Chile and Flour Tortillas: the Making of a Standard New Mexican Cuisine
The Latino Population and Its Latest Expansion in the US
Aspiration in Ciudad Juárez and Speech Accommodation Sandra Esparza University of Texas at El Paso,
[email protected]
SUBJECT EXPRESSION in a SOUTHEASTERN US MEXICAN COMMUNITY by PHILIP P. LIMERICK (Under the Direction of Chad Howe)
Cavite Chabacano Philippine Creole Spanish: Description and Typology by Marilola Pérez a Dissertation Submitted in Partial Sati
Mini-Guide Mexican Spanish Blanco
Mechica: Indigenous Origin of the Chicano Hybrid Identity
Differences of English and Spanish Grammars, and Their Bearing on American and Mexican Cultures
El Camino Real and America's New Mexican Roots
The Frequency of Ch/T∫/ in Contemporary Mexican Highland
Rhotic Assibilation in Mexican Spanish in Chihuahua
Nahuatl Loan Words in English
Gender and Mexican Spanish
The Sociophonetics and Phonology of the Cavite Chabacano Vowel System
Short-Form Versions of the Spanish Macarthur–Bates Communicative Development Inventories
Reportative Evidentials in Wounaan Meu-Spanish Bilinguals
Chavacano Reader
Spanglish: the Hybrid Voice of Latinos in the United States
“Unfit for Human Consumption” to Taco Tuesday: Mexican Food in Los Angeles from the Early 1900S
Why Los Angeles Spanish Matters
Dizque in Mexican Spanish: the Subjectification of Reportative Meaning
Ethnic Identity, Self-Esteem & Intra Group Conflicts Amongst Latinos
Mexican Immigrants' Views on the Spanish Dialects in Mexico
Mexican-American Studies PEIMS Code: N1130023 Abbreviation: MEXAMS Grade Level(S): 9-12 Number of Credits: 1.0
The Golden Age of Mexican-Spanish Relations, 1931-1939
SPANGLISH: a STUDY of the FEATURES of BILINGUAL SPEAKERS in GEORGIA by AMY HERNANDEZ (Under the Direction of Marlyse Baptista) A
Language Attitudes Toward Mexican Spanish-Accented and Standard Varieties of English" (2018)
Mexico and the Spanish Republic. 1931-1939
The Role of Spanglish in the Social and Academic Lives of Second Generation Latino Students: Students’ and Parents’ Perspectives
Mexican American Language Variety and His Assistance in Compiling This Teachers Guide
Refusal Strategies Among Male Speakers of Mexican Spanish J
Mexican Spanish Intonation
On the Chronology of the Formation of the Chabacano Varieties: a Reply to Parkvall & Jacobs 2018
The Integration of Mexican Immigrants in Dalton/Whitfield, Georgia: the School
Dominant Spanish Dialects Spoken in the United States. INSTITUTION Center for Applied Linguistics, Washington, D.C
The Genesis of Traditional New Mexican Spanish: the Emergence of a Unique Dialect in the Americas