English language and linguistics | Perpustakaan Pusat
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Volume 14, part 1,march 2010
Volume 14, part 2,July 2010
Volume 15, part 1,march 2011
Volume 15,part 2,July 2011
Volume 15,part 3,November 2011
Volume 16,part 1, march 2012
Volume 16,part 2,July 2012
Volume 16,part 3,November 2012
Volume 17,part 1,March 2013
Volume17,part 2,July 2013
Volume 14, part 1,march 2010
-Anyone for non-scalarity?/Patrick J. Duffley and Pierre Larrivee
-The rise of the to-infinitive;evidence from adjectival complementation/An Van Linden
-Adnominal adjectives in old English/Dagmar Haumann
-Size noun constructions as collocationally constrained constructions;lexical and grammaticalized uses/Lieselotte Brems
-Th’interpretation of t’definitife article in t’north of England/Ken Lodge
Volume 14, part 2,July 2010
-Special issue on future time reference in English edited by/Ilse Depraetere and Christopher Williams
-The development of future time expressions in late modern English;redistribution of forms or change in discourse?/Nadja Nesselhauf
-Will;tense or modal or both/Raphael Salkie
-Expressions of futurity in contemporary English;a contruction grammar perpective/Alexander Bergs
-Beyond aspect;will be- ing and shall be- ing’/Agnes Celle and Nicholas Smith
-Future time reference expressed by be to in present-day English/Renaat Declerck
Volume 15, part 1,march 2011
-Towards a more explicit taxonomy of root possibility/Ilse Depraetere and Susan Reed
-Phonemically contrastive fricatives in old English?/Donka Minkova
-The right-headedness of morfhology and the status and development of category-determinimg prefixes in English/Akiko Nagano
-Norm vs variation in british English irregular verbs:the case of past tense sang vs sung/Lieselotte Anderwald
-The distal demonstrative as discourse marker in Beowulf/Richard Epstein
-Vowel change as systemic optimization;why the new Zealand English front vowel shift is not a good example/Christian Langstrof
Volume 15,part 2,July 2011
-Special issue on the structure of the noun phrase in English: synchronic and diachronic explorations/ edited by
-Grammatical change in the noun phrase:the influence of written language use/Douglas Biber and Bethany Gray
-The development of intensification scales in noun-intensifying usus of adjectives:sources, paths and mechanism of change/Lobke ghesquiere and Kristin Davidse
-Noun ellipsis in English:adjectival modifier and the role of context/Christine Gunter
-English preforms;an alternative account/Evelien Keizer
-The big mess contruction:interactions between the lexicon and construction/Jong-Bok kim and Peter Sells
-Genitive coordinations with personal pronouns/John Payne
-Left-peripheral expansion of the English NP/Freek Van De Velde
Volume 15,part 3,November 2011
-Innovation in a conservation region:the Kentish sermons genitive system/Sara Myer
-In search of grammaticalization in synchronic dialect data;general extenders in northeast England/Heike Pichler and Stephen levely
-The meaning of the English present participle/Hendrik De Smet and Liesbet Heyvaer
-Help vs help to;a multifactorial,mixed-effects account of infinitive marker omission/Arne Lohmann
-Testing claims of a usage-based phonology with Liverpool English t-to-r/Lynn Clark and Kevin Watson
Volume 16,part 1, march 2012
-Negative inversion, negative concord and sentential negation in the history of English/Phillip Wallage
-At the interface of grammaticalisation and lexicalization;the case of take prisoner/Eva Berlage
-Operationalising salience;definite article reduction in the north of England/Peter Racz
-Revisiting binomial order in English;ordering contraints and reversibility/Sandra Mollin
-Left-edge delection in English and subject omission in diaries/Andrew Weir
-Exploring the relation between the qualitative and quantitative uses of the determiner some/Patrick J. Duffley and Pierre Larrivee
-On the interchangeability of actually and really in spoken English;Quantitative and qualitative evidence from corpora/mark Gray
Volume 16,part 2,July 2012
-Special issue;selected papers from the fourth international conference on late modern English/edited by
-Relative complexity in scientific discourse/Marianne Hundt , David Denison, Gerold Schneider
-A usage-based analysis of phrasal verbs in early and late modern English/Yasuaki Ishizaki
-A bit of this and ab bit of that:on social identification in early and late modern English letters/Minna Nevala
-The king’s speech;metalanguage of nation, man and class in anecdotes about George III/Carol Percy
-Late modern English an a dutch context/Ingrid Tieken-Boon Van Ostade
-Long-s in late modern English manuscripts/Lyda Fens-De Zeeuw and Robin Straaijer
Volume 16,part 3,November 2012
-The morfhology of-ly and the categorical status of ‘adverbs’ in English/Heinz J. Giegerich
-Pre-R dentalisation in northern England/Warren Maguire
-Branching direction in recursive structures/Thomas Berg
-Preposition copying and pruning in present-day English/Andrew Radford, Claudia Felser, Oliver Boxell
-Prosodically conditioned morphological change:presenvation vs loss in early English prefixed/Benjamin J. Molineaux
-Never again;the mulyiple grammaticalization of never as a marker of negation in English/Christopher Lucas and David Willis
-Ne + infinitive contructions in old English/Linda Van Bergen
Volume 17,part 1,March 2013
-The positioning of concessive adverbial clauses in English;assessing the importance of discourse-pragmatic and processing-based contraints/Daniel Wiehmann and Elma Kerz
-Labiodental fronting of/O/in London and Edinburgh across-dialectal study/Erik Scheef and Michael Ramsammy
-Analogy in the emergence of intrusiver-r in English/Marton Soskuthy
-T-to-R and the northern subject rule;Questionnaire-based spatial,social and structural linguistics/IsabelleBuchstaller,Karen P. Corrigan,Anders Holmberg,Patrick Honeybone and Warren Maguire
-The prosody of question tags in English/Nicole Dehe and Bettina Braun
-Subjectivity,indefiniteness and semantic change/Turo Vartiainen
-Gender/sex discrepancies in pronominal references to animals;a statictical analysis/Laure Gardelle
Volume17,part 2,July 2013
-Special issue on phonological mergers in English/Edited by Introduction;what are maergers and can they be reserved?/Warren Maguire,Lynn Clark and Kevin Watson
-Using nonsense words to investigate nowel merger/Jennifer Hay,Katie Drager and Brynmor Thomas
-On the role of social factors in the loss of phonemic distinctions/Maciej Baranowski
-How salient is the nurse-square merger?/Kevin Watson and Lynn Clark
-New Contrast acquisition;Methodological issues and theoretical implications/Jennifer Nycz-‘Flip-flop’ and mergers-in-progress/Lauren Hall-Lew
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