Tertiary stress in Old English: some reflections on explanatory inadequacy
págs. 3-12
págs. 13-37
On the syllable weight of -VC# in Old English: a metrical perspective
págs. 39-55
Old English short diphthongs and the theory of glide emergence
Robert P. Stockwell
págs. 57-72
On the use of the past to explain the present: the history of /r/ in English and Scots
págs. 73-89
Verbal derivation in English: a historical survey or Much ado about nothing
págs. 93-117
Snowball effect in lexical diffusion: the development of -s in the third person singular present indicative in English
Mieko Ogura, William S-Y. Wang
págs. 119-141
The 3rd plural present indicative in Early Modern English: variation and linguistic contact
págs. 143-160
Morphological standardization: the strong verbs in Scots
págs. 161-181
Scandinavian loans and processes of word-formation in ME: some preliminary considerations
págs. 185-198
Towards syntactic isomorphism and semantic dissimilation: the semantics and syntax of prospective verbs in Early Modern English
págs. 199-220
Evidence for clitic adverbs in Old English: an evaluation
págs. 223-245
verbal complementation in Early ME: how do the infinitives fit in?
págs. 247-270
A look at that/zero: variation in Restoration English
págs. 271-286
págs. 287-299
págs. 303-326
Social network theory and Eighteenth-Century English: the case of Boswell
págs. 327-337
Eighteenth-Century normative grammar in practice: the case of Captain Cook
págs. 339-362
The Jocks and the Geordies: modified standards in Eighteenth-Century pronouncing dictionaries
págs. 363-382
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