págs. 3-22
págs. 23-48
págs. 49-68
From locative to durative to focalized?: The English progressive and 'PROG imperfective drift'
págs. 69-88
págs. 89-108
págs. 109-124
págs. 125-140
págs. 141-156
págs. 157-180
págs. 183-202
"'Tis he, 'tis she, 'tis me, 'tis - I don't know ...": Cleft and identificational constructions in 16th to 18th century English plays
págs. 203-222
Emotion verbs with 'to'-infinitive complements: From specific to general predication
págs. 223-240
Subjective progressives in seventeenth and eighteenth century English: Secondary grammaticalization as a process of objectification
págs. 241-256
págs. 3-30
The which is most and right harde to answere: Intensifying 'right' and 'most' in earlier English
págs. 31-52
The diachronic development of the intensifier 'bloody': a case study in historical pragmatics
págs. 53-74
págs. 75-94
págs. 97-116
págs. 117-138
A look at 'respect': Investigating metonymies in Early Modern English
págs. 139-158
Germanic vs French fixed expressions in Middle English prose: Towards a corpus-base historical English phraseology
págs. 159-184
Latin loanwords of the early modern period: How often did French act as an intermediary?
págs. 185-202
Was Old French '-able' borrowable?: A diachronic study of word-formation processes due to language contact
págs. 217-240
Women and other 'small things': '-ette' as a feminine marker
págs. 241-258
The early Middle English scribe: Sprach er wie er schrieb?
págs. 1-44
págs. 45-65
Middle English word geography: Methodology and applications illustrated
págs. 67-89
Northern Middle English: Towards telling the full story
págs. 91-109
págs. 111-130
Dynamic dialectology and social networks
Mieko Ogura, William S-Y. Wang
págs. 131-152
The Celtic Hypothesis hasn't gone away: New perspectives on old debates
págs. 153-170
On the trail of "intolerable Scoto-Hibernic jargon": Ulster English, Irish English and dialect hygiene in William Carleton's "Traits and stories of the Irish peasantry" (First Series, 1830)
págs. 171-184
págs. 185-194
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