Indiana University Anthropological Linguistics · United States
ISSN0003-5483
SJR Q3✓ Scopus / SJR
12
/ 100
High Risk
Score Breakdown
✓ Scopus Q3+12
Total12
Journal Impact Factor
Not on record at PubScope. The Journal Impact Factor is published by Clarivate for Web of Science (JCR)–indexed journals.
SJR Score
0.166
H-Index
41
Total Works
440
Total Citations
4,783
2yr Mean Citedness
0.00
Free JIF alternative
Aims & Scope✦ Inferred from recent articles
Anthropological Linguistics focuses on the study of language in its cultural context, examining linguistic structures, semantic systems, and the relationship between language and social practices. Recent articles explore kinship terminology, demonstrative systems, numeral systems, color terms, and the role of onomatopoeia in various languages. The journal also investigates verbal art, personal names, and the historical development of languages, often drawing on fieldwork and corpus data from diverse indigenous communities.
AI-summarised from recent articles · verify on the publisher page
⚡ Speed vs Prestige
How does this journal balance review speed with impact level?
Based on the Think.Check.Submit framework by DOAJ, COPE & OASPA. All data from verified open sources.
Publication & Citation Trend
Articles published
Times cited
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
Source: OpenAlex · Note: citations accumulate over time so older years appear higher
SJR Quartile by Discipline
Scimago ranks this journal separately in each subject category — its quartile can differ by discipline.
AnthropologyQ3
Linguistics and LanguageQ3
Subject Classification
Scopus Categories
AnthropologyLinguistics and Language
Research Topics (OpenAlex)
Linguistic Variation and MorphologyMultilingual Education and PolicySyntax, Semantics, Linguistic VariationSpanish Linguistics and Language StudiesLanguage, Discourse, Communication StrategiesHistorical Linguistics and Language StudiesLexicography and Language StudiesLinguistics and language evolutionCategorization, perception, and languageLinguistics, Language Diversity, and Identity