English in Transition 1500-1700: on Variation in Second Person Singular Pronoun Usage
págs. 5-16
"The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke" and the Pronouns of Address: Q1 (1603) versus Q2 (1604/5)
págs. 17-22
págs. 23-38
Continental English and the Standardization of the English Language in the Early Sixteenth Century: 1525-1540
págs. 39-46
págs. 47-56
The choice of relativizers in Early Modern English: evidence from the Helsinki Corpus
págs. 57-66
págs. 67-72
The interaction of polysemy and complementation: a case study
págs. 73-79
Seventeenth-Century Jurisprudence and Eighteenth-Century Lexicography: sources for Johnson's Notion of Authority
págs. 79-92
págs. 93-98
págs. 99-106
English and French as L1 and L2 in Renaissance England: A Consequence of Medieval Nationalism
págs. 107-114
págs. 115-126
Mad Moll and Merry Meg: the Roaring Girls as Popular Heroine in Elizabethan and Jacobean Writings
págs. 129-140
págs. 141-146
págs. 147-152
págs. 153-158
Blurred Contours: an Attempt to Deconstruct the Female Character in Books I and III of Edmund Spenser's "The Faerie Queene"
págs. 159-164
págs. 165-172
Death in Northern Africa: the Battle of Alcazar & its Theatrical Representation
págs. 173-178
"A more Familiar Straine": puppetry and Burlesque, or, Translation as Debasement in Ben Jonson's "Bartholomew Fair"
págs. 179-186
págs. 189-200
págs. 201-216
Emblems of Darkness: "Othello" 1604 & the "Masque of Blackness" 1605
págs. 217-224
págs. 225-230
Conversion narratives: Othello and other black characters in Shakespeare's and Lope de Vega's plays
págs. 231-236
págs. 237-242
"Deformed, unfinished, sent before my time": Monstrosity in "Richard III" and Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein"
págs. 243-248
págs. 249-252
págs. 253-260
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