All Papers
- Akimoto, Minoji: On the subjective development of 'by the
way'
- Alcorn, Rhona: A Corpus of Changes: towards a thematic
taxonomy
- Anderwald, Lieselotte: "Pained the Eye and Stunned the
Ear": Why was the Progressive Passive hated so much? A case study of
prescriptive comments in 250 grammars of 19c English
- Andrushenko, Olena: Information structure and word order
of Old English simple sentence
- Antkowiak, Anna: Personal pronouns as clitics in Middle
English
- Auer, Anita (1); Laitinen, Mikko (2); Fairman, Tony (3): Letters of Artisans and the Labouring Poor (England, c. 1750-1835):
Approaching Linguistic Diversity in Late Modern English
- Bartnik, Artur: Non-nominative resumptive pronouns in Old
English relatives clauses
- Bator, Magdalena: Culinary vocabulary in Middle English –
a semantic analysis
- Beal, Joan Christine: The Eighteenth-Century Speaks: The
Challenge of Historical Phonology of the Late Modern Period
- Bech, Kristin: The anaphoric status of initial adjuncts in
the history of English
- Bilynsky, Michael: The OED earliest quotations in the
electronic modelling of diachronic lexical objects: the case of
verbs and deverbal coinages
- Borchers, Melanie: Revising the classification of
linguistic borrowing – a phraseological approach
- Borlongan, Ariane Macalinga; Lim, JooHyuk; Collings, Peter; Yao, Xinyue: The Subjunctive
Mood in Philippine English: A Diachronic Analysis
- Broccias, Cristiano: Watching as-clauses in Late Modern
English
- Broz, Vlatko: The Old English prefix for-: evidence of
grammaticalization and lexicalization
- Busse, Beatrix: A diachronic approach to speech, writing and thought
presentation
- But, Roxanne: “Biting the Culls of their Scouts”: The Cant
Lexis in Historical Corpora
- Castillo, Concha: On the loss of V-to-I movement
- Cesiri, Daniela: Language and Power – Language is Power.
Strategies for obtaining consensus during the political propaganda
in ‘pre-republican’ Ireland
- Chaemsaithong, Krisda: Multiple Voices in Courtroom
Narratives: The Case of Expert Witnesses
- Chamson, Emil: A Clump of Crinkled Cookies: The Dutch/Low
German Heritage in Late Modern English Dialects and Beyond
- Chao-Castro, Milagros: When do the adverbial forms of a
dual-form adverb stop being variants?
- Chapman, Don W.: Enforcing or Effacing Useful
Distinctions?: Infer vs. Imply
- Chrambach, Susanne: The order of adverbials of time and
place in Old English
- Cichosz, Anna; Gaszewski, Jerzy: Constituent order in
conjunct clauses in selected Old English translations
- Cole, Marcelle: Identifying the author(s) of the
Lindisfarne Gloss
- Curzan, Anne: Prescriptivism: More Than Descriptivism's
Foil
- Czerniak, Izabela Barbara: The rise of the SVO order in
early English and language contacts vs. other factors affecting the
dialectal distribution
- D'Arcy, Alexandra: Having ramifications: When
developmental trajectories clash
- De Haas, Nynke K.: The Northern Subject Rule in Middle
English and after: changing conditions on verbal
morphosyntax
- Denison, David: On the history of English (and) word
classes
- Dossena, Marina: (Re)constructed Eloquence. Rhetorical and
pragmatic strategies in the speeches of Native Americans as reported
by 19th-century commentators
- Dreschler, Gea: The clause-initial position in Old
English: a study of prepositional phrases
- Durkin, Philip: duent jə sē up iər ət t’riadz əz muki?
Some implications of a re-examination of the etymology of
road.
- Eitelmann, Matthias: -self vs. zero: Determinants of
linguistic variation and their impact on the choice between
reflexive strategies
- Elsweiler, Christine: Nominal compounds in Layamon's
Brut
- Esquibel (Janecka), Joanna: How would they transfer the
message across? From theodan to translaten: on the replacement of
native forms with a Romance borrowing
- Fanego, Teresa: Motion events in the history of English:
the emergence of the 'sound emission to motion'
construction
- Faya Cerqueiro, Fatima: Incorporation of sports lexicon
into English: A diachronic approach
- Fernández Cuesta, Julia Mª: Sociolinguistic variation in
16th - century legal texts from Yorkshire
- Filppula, Markku Johannes: Convergent developments between
‘Old’ and ‘New’ Englishes
- Fitzmaurice, Susan Mary: Semantic-pragmatic change,
ideology and race in the history of English in Zimbabwe
- González-Díaz, Victorina: “I think they are quite the
thing for her”: Intensifiers in Burney and Austen
- 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
- Hickey, Raymond: Vowels before /r/ in the history of
English
- Higashiizumi, Yuko: The development of causal clauses and
insubordination: The case of because-clauses in Modern
English
- Hiltunen, Risto: Pragmatics meets paratexts: Early English
prologues and epilogues
- Hotta, Ryuichi: A LAEME-based study on the levelling of
adjectival inflections in Early Middle English
- Huber, Judith: Motion Verbs in the History of
English
- Illés, Theresa-Susanna: British-Celtic influence on ME
relative clauses – resumptive pronouns and stranded
prepositions
- Iyeiri, Yoko: Adverbial Clauses in the Paston
Letters
- 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
- Kazmierski, Kamil: Has English become a vowel shifting
language, and if so why?
- Kharlamenko, Oxana: On nouns of more than one gender in
the Old English version of Bede’s Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis
Anglorum
- Kijak, Artur: What makes velars and labials inseparable
friends
- Kilpiö, Matti: Dynamic habban 'have' in Old
English
- Kohnen, Thomas: Speech-act conventions in 19th- and
20th-century England: Focus on directives
- Koike, Takeshi: Composite Predicates in OE of the type
[Light Verb + Deverbal Noun + Genitive NP]: with reference to the
history of the Genitive Case
- 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
- Laing, Margaret (1); Lass, Roger (2): A Corpus of
Narrative Etymologies: towards a typology of change
- 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
- Leitner, Magdalena: Towards (Im)politeness in Early
Scottish Texts between Private and Public
- Lenker, Ursula: Knitting and Splitting Information: Medial
Placement of Adverbials in the History of English
- Lutz, Angelika: Language Contact and Prestige
- Lutzky, Ursula: Early Modern English discourse markers - a
feature of female speech?
- Mantlik, Annette: Functions of shell-noun-constructions
historically: 'fact' and 'problem'
- Marttila, Ville Juhani: Patterns of abbreviation: a
corpus-linguistic approach to Late Middle English abbreviation
practices
- McManus, Jennifer: On the Grammaticalization of English
Maximizing Degree Modifiers: the Case of 'utterly'.
- Middeke, Kirsten: Case-assignment in Old English
- Minkova, Donka: The productivity of functional
stress-shifting in Middle English
- Miura, Ayumi: Why are _like_ and _loathe_ impersonal and
_love_ and _hate_ non-impersonal?
- Molencki, Rafal: The competition between because and
forcause in Late Middle English
- Mollin, Sandra: Tracking changes in binomial reversibility
in Late Modern English
- Myers, Sara M: The survival of unambiguous Old English
adjective case endings in early Middle English texts from the
Southwest Midlands
- Mäkinen, Martti: Why was persuasion needed in early modern
medical instructional texts?
- Nakamura, Fujio: The period of establishment of
tag-questions
- Nakayasu, Minako: Shrighte Emelye, and howleth Palamon:
Tense alternation in Chaucer
- 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, Jerzy (1); Łęcki, Andrzej (2): Grammaticalization
of adverbial subordinators expressing purpose in Old
English
- Nykiel, Joanna: Constraints on preposition omission in
ellipsis: A view from the history of English
- Ogura, Mieko (1); Wang, William S-Y. (2): Evolution of
Grammatical Forms in English
- Oinonen, Raisa: Directives and politeness: A quantitative
study on Early Modern English correspondence
- Osawa, Fuyo: The Syntactic Nature of Grammaticalization in
English
- Petré, Peter: Changing textual functions of 'be Ving' from
Old to Middle English
- Phillips, Betty S.: Gradience in an Abrupt Change: The
English Diatonic Stress Shift
- Pierce, Marc; Boas, Hans C.: The History of English
Influence on Texas German
- Pons-Sanz, Sara Maria: Aldred’s Multiple Glosses: A Study
of Ordering Preferences
- Pődör, Dóra: Early Celtic Borrowings in English:
Chronology, Phonology, Role in Word-Formation, and Textual
Context
- Ranson, Rita: A General Idea of a Pronouncing Dictionary (
1774) : Walker's Plan for the pronunciation of English.
- Ratia, Maura: Manifestations of societal dichotomies in
plague texts of the Stuart period
- Ritt, Nikolaus; Zehentner, Eva: Subjectification and verbs of the type to
cope (with)
- Roads, Judith: Early Modern English Quaker language: this
paper is 'beyond thee'
- Robinson, Justyna Anna: Semantic change in dialect
lexis
- Rodríguez-Puente, Paula: On the colloquialisation of
genres or the ‘drift’ to more oral styles: Phrasal verbs in
focus
- Ronan, Patricia: The historical development of volitional
and epistemic will, shall and would in Irish English
- Ruano-Garcia, Javier: Kennett is our authority for the
provincial use of the word: The reception of MS Lansd. 1033 in
Halliwell’s Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words
(1847)
- Röthlisberger, Melanie: Syntactic weight and the dative
alternation in 20th century British and American English
- Rütten, Tanja: Inscriptions of explicit performatives in
written language: towards a taxonomy of performative utterances in
historical data
- Salmi, Hanna: Speech act verbs in Early Modern English
debate poetry
- Schneider, Gerold; Lehmann, Hans Martin; Schneider, Peter: Parsing Early Modern English corpora
- Schultz, Julia: The Highs and Lows of the French Influence
on English in the Twentieth Century
- Shibasaki, Reijirou: On the rise of (the) point is, ... as
discourse marker in the history of American English
- Sims, Lynn Diane: Robert Mannyng of Brunne’s 'Chronicle'
and early 14th-century English
- Skaffari, Janne; Carroll, Ruth; Salmi, Hanna; Varila, Mari-Liisa;
Peikola, Matti; Hiltunen, Risto: Pragmatic motivations for
visual choices in the pages of the Polychronicon
- Skybina, Valentyna (1); Bytko, Natali (2); Vasylenko, Iryna (3): Linguo-Cognitive Interpretation of Lexical Borrowing in
English
- Sommerer, Lotte: Revisiting the 'dem poss construction':
the co-occurrence of determinatives in the Old English NP
- Stanley, Eric Gerald: Unlikely-Looking Old English Verb
Forms
- Stenroos, Merja: Dialect and bilingualism in late medieval
English schoolbooks
- Suhr, Carla Maria: A third axis to Koch &
Oesterreicher: Paratextual features
- Suzuki, Hironori: On MV/VM order in Genesis B
- Sylwanowicz, Marta: Treasure of pore men, countrymans
friend or gentlewomans companion? – on the use of interpersonal
strategies in English medical compilations.
- Säily, Tanja: Variation in morphological productivity in
historical corpora: Why are 18th-century letters different?
- Taavitsainen, Irma: Period style and medical discourse for
professional and lay audiences 1665-1800
- Tanabe, Harumi: Complementation Pattern of give up and its
Synonymous Verbs in 1800-2000
- Thaisen, Jacob: Initial Position in the Middle English
Verse Line
- Thompson, Penelope Jane: Non-high vowel deletion vs. high
vowel deletion: The phonology of the past participles in Old
English
- Timofeeva, Olga: Constructing the enemy: names for the
Vikings in early medieval English chronicles
- Tomaszewska, Magdalena Róża: The development of OE durran,
etc
- Tottie, Gunnel (1); Johansson, Christine (2): Zero Subject
Relativizers in Five Centuries: 1560 – 1990
- Tyrkkö, Jukka: On Stylometrics of Early Printed Medical
Texts
- Uchida, Mitsumi: 'Down the road' and 'down the line':
semantic shifts of prepositional phrases in Present-day
English
- Van Bergen, Linda: Let's talk about uton
- Van Gelderen, Elly: Changes in the pronoun system in the
history of English
- Van Hattum, Marije: New-dialect formation in
fourteenth-century Ireland: a corpus-based study of Irish English
pre-modal verbs
- Vartiainen, Turo: Indefiniteness, subjectivity and
lexicalization
- Vennemann, Theo: English and German word order: Why are
they different?
- Versloot, Arjen Pieter (1); Adamczyk, Elzbieta (2): The
study of Old English and Old Frisian as a function of corpus
size
- Walkden, George: Null subjects in Old English
- Walker, Terry (1); Grund, Peter (2): “w=th= many vnsemely
woordES”: Speech Representation and the Pragmatics of Speech in
16th-Century Witness Depositions
- Wallis, Christine: Layers of Reading in the Old English
Bede
- Wawrzyniak, Agnieszka Elżbieta: ME fair in The Canterbury
Tales
- Wełna, Jerzy: <O> or <u>: a dilemma of the
Middle English scribal practice
- Williams, Graham Trevor (1); Sairio, Anni (2): Ironic
Insults as In-group Bonding: A Diachronic Investigation,
c.1400-1800
- Wojtyś, Anna: On the demise of a preterite-present verb:
why was unnan lost?
- Włodarczyk, Matylda: Histories from below? The case of
South African English
- Yanagi, Tomohiro: From Dative-Marked Experiencers to
Prepositional Experiencers in the History of English
- Yoshikawa, Fumiko: Adverbial Connectors and Topic Shift in
Middle English Religious Prose
- Zic Fuchs, Milena (1); Broz, Vlatko (2): The present
perfect from a diachronic perspective: an analysis of aspectual and
tense constructions
- Zimmermann, Richard: Variably Overt and Empty Expletives
with Finite and Non-finite Clauses in Early English