Skip to main content

SLLL

  • Home
  • People
    • Executive
    • Academics
    • Professional staff
    • Visitors
    • Current HDR students
    • Graduated HDR students
    • Alumni
  • Events
    • Event series
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
  • News
    • Media library
  • Students
    • Study with us
      • Undergraduate study
      • Graduate coursework
      • Higher degree by research
    • Current students
      • Honours
      • Student exchange
      • Language placement test
    • Overseas study tours
    • Language videos
    • Summer Scholars Program
  • Study options
  • Research
    • Research projects
      • Sydney Speaks Project
        • People
          • Members
          • Students
        • Dissemination
        • Corpora
    • Speech & Language Lab
  • Classics Museum
    • About
    • Classics Museum Catalogue
    • Museum Events
    • Curator-led Tours
    • Friends of the Museum
    • Volunteer Guides
    • Collections Management
    • Research
  • Contact us

Centres

  • Australian National Dictionary Centre
  • Centre for Australian Literary Cultures
  • Centre for Classical Studies
  • Centre for Early Modern Studies
  • Institute for Communication in Health Care

Australian National Dictionary Centre

Resources

Centre for Australian Literary Cultures

Centre for Research on Language Change

Institute for Communication in Health Care

Linguistics

SLLL

Partners

  • ARC Centre of Excellence in the Dynamics of Language
  • Linguistics at ANU

Networks

  • CuSPP
  • French Research Cluster
  • Translational Research in Indigenous Language Ecologies Collective
    • People
    • Projects
    • Selected Publications

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Humanities and the Arts
  • Australian National Internships Program

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeWho's Centric Now? The Present State of Post-Colonial Englishes
Who's Centric Now? The Present State of Post-Colonial Englishes
Who's Centric Now? The Present State of Post-Colonial Englishes
Author/editor: Bruce Moore
Published in (Monograph or Journal): General Lexicographical Studies
Year published: 2001

Abstract

Bruce Moore ed. Oxford University Press, 2001. 320 pages. ISBN 0 19 551450 5.

These are the papers from a conference held at the Australian National University 27 to 29 October 1999. The conference was sponsored by Oxford University Press Australia and New Zealand, the Australian National Dictionary Centre, and the Humanities Research Centre.

Chapters:

    Tom McArthur 'World English(es), world dictionaries'

    Tony Deverson 'New Zealand, New Zealand English, and the dictionaries'

    Bruce Moore 'Australian English: Australian identity'

    Graeme Kennedy 'Lexical borrowing from Maori in New Zealand English'

    Penny Silva 'South African English: politics and the sense of place'

    Vincent B.Y. Ooi 'Globalising Singaporean-Malaysian English in an inclusive learner's dictionary'

    Rahela Banu and Roland Sussex 'English in Bangladesh after independence: dynamics of policy and practice

    R.S. Gupta 'English in post-colonial India: an appraisal'

    Cavan Hogue 'The spread of Anglo-Indian words into South-East Asia'

    Darrell Tryon 'Pacific Pidgin Englishes: the Australian connection'

    Ian Malcolm 'Two-way English and the bicultural experience'

    Jan Tent 'The current status of English in Fiji'

    John Simpson 'Queen's English and People's English'

    Katherine Barber 'Neither Uncle Sam nor John Bull: Canadian English comes of age'

    Pam Peters 'Varietal effects: the influence of American English on Australian and British English'