Peer-reviewed Journal Articles
Kim, Ji Yea (2023). A corpus-based study of amplifier collocations in American English and British English. Eoneohag 96, 55-78. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17290/jlsk.2023..96.55 [KCI]
Cepeda, Paola, Andrei Antonenko, Mark Aronoff, Rachel Christensen, Aniello De Santo, Jennifer Jaiswal, Ji Yea Kim, Michelle Mayro, Veronica Miatto & Lori Repetti (2023). 'Language in the United States': An innovative learner-centered asynchronous general-education course in linguistics. Language 99(2), e86-e107. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/lan.2023.a900095 [SSCI, A&HCI]
Kim, Ji Yea (2023). Perceptual cues to the voicing of word-final stops in English. English Language and Linguistics 29(2), 17-38. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17960/ell.2023.29.2.002 [KCI]
Kim, Ji Yea (2023). The English suffix -less and its crosslinguistic extension to Korean. Eoneohag 95, 125-142. DOI: http://doi.org/10.17290/jlsk.2023..95.125 [KCI]
Kim, Ji Yea (2022). Adaptation of chemical terminology from English into Korean. English Language and Linguistics 28(3), 39-57. DOI: http://doi.org/10.17960/ell.2022.28.3.003 [KCI]
Kim, Ji Yea (2022). Consonant epenthesis in English diminutives. Korean Journal of Linguistics 47(3), 385-406. DOI: http://doi.org/10.18855/lisoko.2022.47.3.001 [KCI]
Kim, Ji Yea (2022). A typology of phonological changes in intervocalic position in terms of continuancy and voicing. Eoneohag 93, 31-54. DOI: http://doi.org/10.17290/jlsk.2022..93.31 [KCI]
Kim, Ji Yea (2022). Variation in stem-final consonant clusters in Korean nominal inflection. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 7(1), 1-45. DOI: https://doi.org/10.16995/glossa.5784 [SSCI, A&HCI]
Kim, Ji Yea (2022). The Korean innovative suffix -lʌ: Indirect affix borrowing and morphological copy epenthesis. Studies in Phonetics, Phonology and Morphology 28(1), 57-82. DOI: http://doi.org/10.17959/sppm.2022.28.1.57 [KCI]
Kim, Ji-Yea (2012). Perception and production of aspiration in English voiceless stops. The New Studies of English Language and Literature 52, 253-270, Korea. [KCI]
Conference Proceedings and Working Papers
Kim, Ji Yea (2022). Why [s]? An analogical account of the epenthetic consonant quality in nonstandard Korean. In Kaoru Horie, Kimi Akita, Yusuke Kubota, David Y. Oshima, and Akira Utsugi (eds.), Proceedings of the 29th Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference, 71-81. CSLI Publications.
Kim, Ji Yea & Lori Repetti (2021). Demonym suffixes in English. In Hewett, Matthew, Corinne Kasper, Sanghee Kim and Naomi Kurtz (eds.), Proceedings of the 56th Annual meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society, 233-243. Chicago, IL: Chicago Linguistic Society.
Kim, Ji Yea (2019). Motivations for consonant epenthesis in nonstandard suffixed forms of Korean nouns. In Hout, Katherine, Anna Mai, Adam McCollum, Sharon Rose and Matt Zaslansky (eds.), Supplemental proceedings of the 2018 Annual Meeting on Phonology. Washington, DC: Linguistic Society of America. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/amp.v7i0.4570
Kim, Ji Yea (2013). Perception of voicing of English word-final consonants: A comparative study of English listeners and Korean listeners. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (ASA), 134(5), 4248. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4831628
Kim, Ji Yea (2012). English unaspirated stops in the consonant clusters /s + p t k/ produced by Korean native speakers: An acoustic analysis of voice onset time. English Studies 32, 157-168. Department of English Language and Literature, SNU, Seoul, Korea.
Kim, Ji Yea (2012). Production of English long vowels by native speakers of English and Korean. Proceedings of the 2012 International Conference of the English Language and Literature Association of Korea (ELLAK), 91-92.
Kim, Ji Yea (2012). Production of aspiration in English voiceless stops in terms of place of articulation. SNU Working Papers in English Language and Linguistics 10, 1-15. Seoul: Department of English Language and Literature, SNU.
Kim, Ji Yea (2011). Perception and production of aspiration in English voiceless stops: An experiment-based comparative study of native speakers of English and Korean. Proceedings of the 2011 Annual Conference of the Applied Linguistics Association of Korea (ALAK), 91-94.