“…By explicitly or implicitly equating language attitudes to the social meanings or indexicality of speech styles (Grondelaers et al, 2016;Rosseel et al, 2019a,b;Soukup, 2013), and by treating them as indicative for the vitality, or on-going change, of language ideologies, quantitative language attitude studies have gone through a conceptual rapprochement with interpretive and qualitative strands of sociolinguistics and with linguistic anthropology, the field where the notions of language ideology and indexicality were originally developed (Kroskrity, 2010;Silverstein, 1979;Woolard and Schieffelin, 1994). It has also been noted, however, that experimental methodologies sit uncomfortably with the contextualized nature of social meaning that is foregrounded in these fields (Potter & Wetherell, 1987;Soukup, 2013;Rosseel et al, 2019a). Indeed, central there is the observation that the meanings of linguistic variables that mark standard and vernacular varieties 'are not precise or fixed but rather constitute a field of potential meaningsan indexical field, or constellation of ideologically related meanings, any one of which can be activated in the situated use of the variable' (Eckert, 2008).…”