The Chronicle of Higher Education's Lingua Franca considers it a "consistently reliable peer-reviewed source of information" and states that "though it is scholarly and research based, there’s a surprising amount of information that is intelligible to anyone, even without special training in linguistics."[2]
The record informs me that I was the pa of American Speech—a fact that somewhat surprises me, for I have a poor memory and I am not normally given to good works.[4]
It became the official journal of the American Dialect Society in 1970.
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Among the New Words
In addition to research articles, American Speech publishes a section titled "Among the New Words", which reports on recent neologisms and provides lexicographical documentation of their uses and origins. The section was introduced to the journal in 1941 by Dwight Bolinger. The section frequently discusses the words nominated for the American Dialect Society's Word of the Year selection.[5]
Abstracting and indexing
This journal is indexed by the following services:
^Mencken, H. L.; Pound, Louise; Kennedy, Arthur G. (1945). "'American Speech,' 1925-1945 the Founders Look Back". American Speech. 20 (4): 241. doi:10.2307/487162. ISSN0003-1283. JSTOR487162.
^Zimmer, Benjamin; Carson, Charles E.; Solomon, Jane (2016). "Seventy-Five Years among the New Words". American Speech. 91 (4): 472–512. doi:10.1215/00031283-3870163.