Early Modern English
- Busse, Beatrix: A diachronic approach to
speech, writing and thought presentation
- Castillo, Concha: On the loss of
V-to-I movement
- De Haas, Nynke K.: The Northern
Subject Rule in Middle English and after: changing
conditions on verbal morphosyntax
- Eitelmann, Matthias: -self vs.
zero: Determinants of linguistic variation and
their impact on the choice between reflexive
strategies
- Fernández Cuesta, Julia Mª: Sociolinguistic variation in 16th - century legal
texts from Yorkshire
- Grund, Peter: “I saw y=e= Child
burning in y=e= fire”: Evidentiality in Early
Modern English Witness Depositions
- Haeberli, Eric; Ihsane, Tabea: Revisiting the Loss of Verb Movement in English:
'V-Adverb' Order in Middle and Early Modern
English
- Higashiizumi, Yuko: The
development of causal clauses and insubordination:
The case of because-clauses in Modern
English
- Kahlas-Tarkka, Leena: “I shall not
speak a word: but I will speak satan”:
socio-pragmatic features of trial discourse in
Salem 1692
- Kaislaniemi, Samuli: Historical
Sociolinguistics revisited: Drawing further
evidence from digital editions of historical
correspondence
- Kohnen, Thomas: Speech-act
conventions in 19th- and 20th-century England:
Focus on directives
- Kopaczyk, Joanna M.: Lexical
bundles in Early Modern medical genres
- Kornexl, Lucia (1); Lenker, Ursula (2): Disentangling “an enduring myth”: The
lexical ‘animal-meat’ divide in English as a model
case for the dynamics of borrowing
- Lavidas, Nikolaos: Null and
cognate arguments in the history of
English
- Lee, Ji Won: Much more than a lot: polarity sensitivity of much and many over time and across
registers
- Lehto, Anu: Complexity and
established genre conventions in Early Modern
English proclamations
- Lutzky, Ursula: Early Modern
English discourse markers - a feature of female
speech?
- Mantlik, Annette: Functions of
shell-noun-constructions historically: 'fact' and
'problem'
- Mäkinen, Martti: Why was
persuasion needed in early modern medical
instructional texts?
- Nevala, Minna: Barbers, beggers
and hungry spys: On social identification of
criminals in early English
- Nevalainen, Terttu: Age-related
variation and language change in Early Modern
English
- Nykiel, Joanna: Constraints on
preposition omission in ellipsis: A view from the
history of English
- Oinonen, Raisa: Directives and
politeness: A quantitative study on Early Modern
English correspondence
- Ratia, Maura: Manifestations of
societal dichotomies in plague texts of the Stuart
period
- Roads, Judith: Early Modern
English Quaker language: this paper is 'beyond
thee'
- Rodríguez-Puente, Paula: On the
colloquialisation of genres or the ‘drift’ to more
oral styles: Phrasal verbs in focus
- Salmi, Hanna: Speech act verbs in
Early Modern English debate poetry
- Schneider, Gerold; Lehmann, Hans Martin;
Schneider, Peter: Parsing Early
Modern English corpora
- Suhr, Carla Maria: A third axis to
Koch & Oesterreicher: Paratextual
features
- Sylwanowicz, Marta: Treasure of
pore men, countrymans friend or gentlewomans
companion? – on the use of interpersonal
strategies in English medical
compilations.
- Tottie, Gunnel (1); Johansson, Christine (2): Zero Subject Relativizers in Five
Centuries: 1560 – 1990
- Tyrkkö, Jukka: On Stylometrics of
Early Printed Medical Texts
- Walker, Terry (1); Grund, Peter (2): “w=th= many vnsemely woordES”: Speech
Representation and the Pragmatics of Speech in
16th-Century Witness Depositions
- Williams, Graham Trevor (1); Sairio, Anni (2):
Ironic Insults as In-group Bonding:
A Diachronic Investigation, c.1400-1800