Full Papers
- Aarts, Bas: What for?
- Anderwald, Lieselotte: GETTING ACQUAINTED, MARRIED, DRESSED and SHAVED:
Passives or not?
- Arndt-Lappe, Sabine: To boldly split where almost everyone has split
before! A corpus study of VP adverbial positions in American English
- Bell, Melanie Jean (1); Arndt-Lappe, Sabine (2): An analogical theory
of word-formation
- Bell, Melanie Jean: An empirical foundation for the distinction
between morphology and syntax in Present-day English
- Bohmann, Axel: Enquoting voices on Twitter: A multi-local analysis of
be + like in computer-mediated discourse
- Braber, Natalie: 'Happeh in Lestah': Language Change in the East
Midlands
- Bruckmaier, Elisabeth: A semasiological-syntactic approach to GET in
World Englishes
- Brunner, Marie-Louise; Diemer, Stefan; Schmidt, Selina: Starting Skype
conversations: Pragmatic features and strategies in an English as a Lingua Franca
context
- Burridge, Kate; Musgrave, Simon: It's speaking Australian English we
are: Irish features in nineteenth century Australia
- Calabrese, Rita: The dynamics of language formation and change in a
complex multilingual context: The case of Indian English
- Childs, Claire: Not or no? Variation in sentential negation across
varieties of Northern British English
- Ciraud-Lanoue, Perrine: It's all figured out! Out and the expression
of a resulting state in phrasal verbs
- 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
- Davydova, Julia: Indian English Quotatives in a Diachronic
Perspective
- Deuber, Dagmar: "The globalisation of vernacular variation" meets
Creole: quotative 'be like' in Trinidad
- Durham, Mercedes: Tapping into linguistic attitudes with twitter: how
#sexy is the Welsh accent?
- Eberle, Nicole: Building Bridges into the Caribbean and Beyond:
Reassessing the Typological Status of Bermudian English
- Ehret, Katharina: Bridging the gap: An information-theoretic approach
to analyse linguistic complexity trends of morphosyntactic structures in English
texts
- 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
- Fernández-Pena, Yolanda: Verbal agreement with collectives
taking of-dependents: a corpus-based analysis
- Filppula, Markku J: HAVE TO vs. HAVE GOT TO in British and Irish
English(es)
- Flambard, Gabriel: On the compositionality of the VP anaphor "do
it"
- Flowerdew, John Leslie: Quantitative behaviour of signalling nouns in
academic discourse
- Flowerdew, Lynne J.: Researching Academic Writing in the Era of
Globalisation: The contribution of corpora
- Fronhofer, Nina-Maria: Writer's stance and the use of passives in the
context of negative evaluations
- Gilquin, Gaëtanelle: Discourse markers in EFL and ESL: Building
a bridge between SLA and contact linguistics
- Grône, Maryse: Resultatives and the causative/inchoative
alternation: the role of volitionality
- Grône, Maryse; Miller, Philip: Syntax and pragmatics in the
interpretation of English transitive resultative constructions
- Grue, Dustin Elias: An approach to measuring term collocability in a
corpus
- Gut, Ulrike (1); Pillai, Stefanie (2): Question intonation in Malaysian
English
- Haas, Florian: The recent history of human impersonal pronouns: a
corpus study
- Hackert, Stephanie: Recent grammatical change in Caribbean English: A
corpus-based study of Bahamian newswriting
- Hartmann, Johanna: Language attitudes on the move -
beyond exonormativity & endonormativity?
- Hinrichs, Lars (1); Szmrecsanyi, Benedikt (2): Which-hunting and the
Standard English relative clause: A case of institutionally backed
colloquialization
- Hinrichs, Lars: Immigration and dialect mixture: The variable uptake
of stereotyped dialect features in the speech of diaspora community insiders and in
crossing
- Hirano, Keiko (1); Britain, David (2): Accommodation, dialect contact
and grammatical variation: verbs of obligation in the Anglophone community in
Japan
- Hoffmann, Thomas (1); Trousdale, Graeme (2): The Diachronic
Development of English Comparative Correlative Constructions
- Hofmann, Matthias (1); Wagner, Susanne (2): The role of frequency in a
regular sound change revisited
- Hundt, Marianne (1); Schneider, Gerold (1); Seoane, Elena (2): Who is
more active and involved? A corpus-based approach to voice in academic
Englishes
- Iyeiri, Yoko (1); Yaguchi, Michiko (2); Baba, Yasumasa (3): Negation and
Speech Style in Professional American English
- Jansen, Sandra: Exploring Convergence Tendencies in the Far North of
England
- Julia, Homann; Plag, Ingo; Gero, Kunter: Against homophony: The
acoustic properties of English {s} morphemes
- Kaltenböck, Gunther: On insubordination: form,
function and development of insubordinate if-clauses
- Karlsson, Monica: Does audiovisual contextualization of L2 idioms
enhance students' comprehension and retention?
- Keizer, Evelien: The "(DET) fact is (that)" construction in English and
Dutch: a Functional Discourse Grammar account
- Kirk, John M.: The Mandative Subjunctive and Linguistic Change: Where
does Irish Standard English Fit In?
- Kohnen, Thomas: Change from below? Evidence from Early Modern English
genre networks
- Koops, Chris (1); Lohmann, Arne (2): Operationalizing the function of
discourse markers via sequencing constraints: the case of English so
- Kranich, Svenja: Recent changes in epistemic modal marking in written
English
- Kretzschmar, William (1,2); Juuso, Ilkka (2): Measurement of Emergence
in Computer Simulation of Speech
- Krug, Manfred; Schützler, Ole; Werner, Valentin: Mapping lexical choices in varieties of English: Integrating
typological profiles and questionnaire data
- Laitinen, Mikko: Ongoing changes in English modals: On the
developments in advanced L2 use of English
- Lehmann, Hans Martin: Grammatical variation and lexical preference in
the complementation of 'provide'.
- Leimgruber, Jakob R. E.: English language policy in multilingual
polities: promotion in Singapore, demotion in Quebec, and indifference in
Wales
- 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
- MacKenzie, Ian L.: Will English as a lingua franca impact on native
English?
- Maekelberghe, Charlotte; Fonteyn, Lauren; Heyvaert, Liesbet: Indefinite and bare nominal gerunds from Middle to
Present-day English - exploiting the nominal
paradigm?
- Mahlberg, Michaela; Stockwell, Peter; Sikveland, Rein: Fictional
speech and mind-modelling in Dickens
- Makino, Takehiko: Vowel and consonant patterns of Japanese speakers'
English: A study based on English Read by Japanese Phonetic Corpus
- Mantlik, Annette: Verbal Hygiene in 19th-century British
Grammars
- Mato-Míguez, Beatriz: Between grammar and discourse: the variation
between imperatives and insubordinated if-clauses in spoken English
- Meierkord, Christiane: Interactions across Englishes
- recent sociophonetic evidence from Uganda
- Miller, Philip H.: Discourse conditions on the choice between verbal
anaphors with orphan complements in English
- 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?
- Mondorf, Britta: A Transitivity Bias in Second Language
Acquisition?
- Mora, Raúl Alberto: New forms of English language
use in Medellín, Colombia: An analysis of two studies.
- 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
- Payne, John: Adjectives and the complement-modifier
distinction
- 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
- Perez-Inofuentes, Danae Maria: Vestiges of English in
Paraguay
- Poplack, Shana; Kastronic, Laura: Be that as it may: The unremarkable
trajectory of the (North) American English subjunctive
- Rado, Janina: Fronted demonstratives in reverse wh-clefts and
Topicalization
- Ramisch, Heinrich: Spoken vs. Written: Analysing past tense and past
participle forms in standard varieties of English
- Rüdiger, Sofia: Explaining Emerging Patterns: A
Corpus-Based Study of the Koreanization of English
- Richard, Jean-Pierre Joseph: How is globalization perceived by
Japanese university students?
- Ronan, Patricia: Variation in article use in English Light Verb
Constructions
- Schützler, Ole: Constructional change in written and
spoken American English: The concessive markers 'notwithstanding',
'in spite of' and 'despite'
- Schleef, Erik; Flynn, Nicholas: Regional diversity in social
perceptions of (ing)
- Schleef, Erik; Turton, Danielle: Monophthongisation of 'like' in two
British capitals: effects of function, context and frequency
- Schneider, Agnes: Future Time Marking in Ghanaian English: On How to
Interpret the Results of a Mixed Effect Logistic Regression Model for
Morphosyntactic Variation in a New English Variety
- Schneider, Gerold: Using computational linguistic models for
descriptive linguistics and psycholinguistics
- Schneider, Ulrike: Multi-word frequency effects in speech: Hesitation
placement in the verb phrase
- Schramm, Andreas: Subtleties of Grammar-Cued Aspect: Cognitive
Evidence from Native and Non-Native Speakers
- Semenenko, Galyna M.: Absolute participial clauses in Early Modern
English: a sociolinguistic study
- Severin, Alyssa: "Zombie rule that I don't live by": measuring language
attitudes with a changing yardstick.
- 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
- Smith, Jennifer; Holmes-Elliott, Sophie: One speaker, two dialects:
testing bidialectalism in a Scottish community
- Stickle, Trini; Wanner, Anja: Productive or formulaic: Syntactic
patterns in the speech of persons with dementia
- Stojakovic, Natasa: The use of mood in adverbial clauses in Early
Modern English
- Taavitsainen, Irma: Texts on eighteenth-century medical topics:
professional and lay practices
- Tadevosyan, Gayane: An Investigation of the Relationship Between
Linguistic Features of Spoken English and English Learning Experiences of Armenian
Learners of English
- Timofeeva, Olga: Racist discourse in Anglo-Saxon England? Strategies of
outgroup construction
- Torikai, Shin'ichiro (1); Tamaruya, Masayuki (2): A Corpus-based Legal
English Dictionary for Non-native English Speaking Law Professionals
- van de Pol, Nikki; Cuyckens, Hubert: Branching out: a diachronic
prototype approach to the development of the English absolute
- Vassileva, Irena; Andreev, Andrei: Desired versus Imposed Bilingualism?
Urban Linguistic Landscaping in Germany and Bulgaria.
- Vergaro, Carla: Of allegations, claims, promises and vows: A
corpus-based study of English illocutionary shell nouns
- Wagner, Suzanne Evans (1); Tagliamonte, Sali A. (2): Incrementation in
adolescence: Tapping the force that drives linguistic change
- Weber, Pia: Functional and stylistic preferences in English and
German
- Westphal, Michael: Linguistic destandardization processes in Jamaican
radio
- Winkle, Claudia: The syntax of spoken English: a cross-varietal
perspective on left dislocation and fronting constructions
- Wolk, Christoph: Bottom-up dialectology
- Yankova, Diana: Legal linguistics: the interdisciplinary paradigm of
legal English
- Zehentner, Eva: Evolutionary pragmatics and the case of verbs like to
cope (with)
- Zerner, Daniel: Word-Formation in West African English