Contact Linguistics
- Borchers, Melanie: Revising the
classification of linguistic borrowing – a
phraseological approach
- Chamson, Emil: A Clump of Crinkled
Cookies: The Dutch/Low German Heritage in Late
Modern English Dialects and Beyond
- Czerniak, Izabela Barbara: The
rise of the SVO order in early English and
language contacts vs. other factors affecting the
dialectal distribution
- Filppula, Markku Johannes: Convergent developments between ‘Old’ and ‘New’
Englishes
- Illés, Theresa-Susanna: British-Celtic influence on ME relative clauses –
resumptive pronouns and stranded
prepositions
- 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
- Lutz, Angelika: Language Contact
and Prestige
- Pierce, Marc; Boas, Hans C.: The
History of English Influence on Texas
German
- Schultz, Julia: The Highs and Lows
of the French Influence on English in the
Twentieth Century
- Skybina, Valentyna (1); Bytko, Natali (2);
Vasylenko, Iryna (3): Linguo-Cognitive Interpretation of Lexical
Borrowing in English
- Stenroos, Merja: Dialect and
bilingualism in late medieval English
schoolbooks
- Timofeeva, Olga: Constructing the
enemy: names for the Vikings in early medieval
English chronicles
- Van Hattum, Marije: New-dialect
formation in fourteenth-century Ireland: a
corpus-based study of Irish English pre-modal
verbs
- Vennemann, Theo: English and
German word order: Why are they
different?