Romaine was born in Massachusetts in 1951, and received an A.B. magna cum laude in German & Linguistics in 1973 from Bryn Mawr College; she then received a master's degree in Phonetics & Linguistics at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland in 1975) and a PhD in linguistics at the University of Birmingham in 1981.[2][3] Since 1984 she has been Merton Professor of English Language at the University of Oxford.[3][4][5]
Her 1982 monograph Socio-historical Linguistics; Its Status and Methodology, correlates linguistic variation with external factors as found in historical data, and is regarded as beginning, or laying the foundation for, the field of sociohistorical linguistics as a sub-discipline.[6][7]
Language, Education and Development; Urban and Rural Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992
Language in Society. An Introduction to Sociolinguistics Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994. Second revised edition 2000.
Communicating Gender Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 1999
(with Daniel Nettle) Vanishing Voices; The Extinction of the World's Languages New York: Oxford University Press, 2000. (Winner of the British Association for Applied Linguistics Book of the Year Prize 2001.[11][12])
^Curzan, Anne. "Historical corpus linguistics and evidence of language change" in: Lüdeling, Anke and Merja Kytö, eds. Corpus Linguistics Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2009; p. 1097
^Nervalainen, Terttu. "Historical Sociolinguistics and Language Change" in: van Kemenade, Ans and Bettelou Los, eds. The Handbook of the History of English Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, 2009; p. 558
^Cook, Vivian; Li, Wei, eds. (2009). Contemporary Applied Linguistics; Volume 2: Linguistics for the real world. London & New York: Continuum International Publishing Group. p. ix. ISBN9780826496812.
^"BAAL Book Prize 2001"(PDF). British Association for Applied Linguistics. Archived from the original(PDF) on 5 September 2011. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
^Linguistics, British Association for Applied. "Book Prize". BAAL. Retrieved 27 May 2023.