Historical Linguistics
- Anderwald, Lieselotte: GETTING ACQUAINTED, MARRIED, DRESSED and SHAVED:
Passives or not?
- Burridge, Kate; Musgrave, Simon: It's speaking Australian English we
are: Irish features in nineteenth century Australia
- Curzan, Anne: Slash: New Technology and a New Coordinator?
- D'hoedt, Frauke; De Smet, Hendrik; Cuyckens, Hubert: English small
clauses: The life and perambulations of a construction
- Eitelmann, Matthias: End-Weight as a Balance Principle, Or: How Much
Weight does the End Need?
- Fanego, Teresa: Multiple sources in language change: the emergence of
English ACC-ing gerundives
- Filppula, Markku J: HAVE TO vs. HAVE GOT TO in British and Irish
English(es)
- Haas, Florian: The recent history of human impersonal pronouns: a
corpus study
- Hoffmann, Thomas (1); Trousdale, Graeme (2): The Diachronic
Development of English Comparative Correlative Constructions
- Kohnen, Thomas: Change from below? Evidence from Early Modern English
genre networks
- Kranich, Svenja: Recent changes in epistemic modal marking in written
English
- Laitinen, Mikko: Ongoing changes in English modals: On the
developments in advanced L2 use of English
- Lewis, Diana: Source-oriented directional particles in Modern
English
- Lubbers, Thijs: In Search of Period-Specific Styles in the History of
English: Equine Manuals as a Sub-Register of Instructional Writing
- Maekelberghe, Charlotte; Fonteyn, Lauren; Heyvaert, Liesbet: Indefinite and bare nominal gerunds from Middle to
Present-day English - exploiting the nominal
paradigm?
- Mantlik, Annette: Verbal Hygiene in 19th-century British
Grammars
- Miura, Ayumi: Revisiting Levin's (1993) 'orphan verbs' and 'captain
verbs' from a diachronic perspective
- Moehlig-Falke, Ruth: The early English middle-reflexive and the
expression of empathy: An instance of typological shift in the pragmatic
domain?
- Musgrave, Simon; Burridge, Kate: Bastards and buggers
- Historical snapshots of Australian English swearing
patterns
- Nevalainen, Terttu; Säily, Tanja; Vartiainen, Turo: Upcoming resource: an online Language Change Database
- Nykiel, Joanna: Gradience in grammar: the ellipsis
alternation
- Osawa, Fuyo: Contributors and Free Riders in
Grammaticalization
- Pentrel, Meike: "but am resolved to alter it, if matters prove
otherwise than I would have them" - Cognitive Strategies and the Ordering of
Conditional Clauses in Early Modern English
- Poplack, Shana; Kastronic, Laura: Be that as it may: The unremarkable
trajectory of the (North) American English subjunctive
- Schützler, Ole: Constructional change in written and
spoken American English: The concessive markers 'notwithstanding',
'in spite of' and 'despite'
- Semenenko, Galyna M.: Absolute participial clauses in Early Modern
English: a sociolinguistic study
- Shibasaki, Reijirou: On the functions of the fact is (that) and that's
the fact in American English: Projectability and intersubjectivity
- Siebers, Lucia: The evolution of African American English(es): New
evidence from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
- Stojakovic, Natasa: The use of mood in adverbial clauses in Early
Modern English
- Suzuki, Daisuke: Form and function of the modal adverbs in Present-day
English
- Timofeeva, Olga: Racist discourse in Anglo-Saxon England? Strategies of
outgroup construction
- Trousdale, Graeme Murray: Variation and Construction Grammar: the case
of English hypocoristics
- van de Pol, Nikki; Cuyckens, Hubert: Branching out: a diachronic
prototype approach to the development of the English absolute
- Zehentner, Eva: Evolutionary pragmatics and the case of verbs like to
cope (with)