All Stories

  1. A terminological problem
  2. Arbitrariness, motivation and idioms
  3. Notions of paradigm and their value in word-formation
  4. Conversion as metonymy
  5. Morphological Entities: Overview and General Issues
  6. Compounds and Compounding
  7. Review of Giegerich 2015
  8. Re-evaluating exocentricity in word-formation
  9. English phonotactics
  10. Semantics of Complex Words
  11. Sense Inheritance in English Word-Formation
  12. Rare, obscure and marginal affixes in English
  13. Concatenative Derivation
  14. The Oxford Reference Guide to English Morphology
  15. Pavol Štekauer, Salvador Valera & Lívia Körtvélyessy, Word-formation in the world’s languages: A typological survey
  16. The Morphology of English Dialects: Verb-Formation in Non-Standard EnglishbyLieselotte Anderwald
  17. Two Unrelated Changes in the English of Young New Zealanders
  18. Beginning Linguistics
  19. IE, Germanic: Danish
  20. An overview of morphological universals
  21. Co-Compounds in Germanic
  22. Aperçus de morphologie du français [Insights into French morphology] (review)
  23. The typology of exocentric compounding
  24. Phonetic Cues to Lexical Structure: Comments on the papers by Turk, Ali and Ingleby, and Wade and Möbius
  25. NO PHONETIC ICONICITY IN EVALUATIVE MORPHOLOGY*
  26. Lenition revisited
  27. Exocentric compounds
  28. Dvandva
  29. A question of identity: A response to Trudgill
  30. Inferring Variation and Change from Public Corpora
  31. Contrast in Language and Linguistics
  32. Derivational Morphology
  33. Playing with Tradition
  34. New Zealand English
  35. Phoneme inventory size and population size
  36. A note regarding ‘On the power-law distribution of language family sizes’
  37. Bernhard Wälchli, Co-compounds and natural coordination . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. Pp. xviii+334.
  38. Language Matters
  39. Martin Haspelmath, Understanding morphology. London: Arnold New York: Oxford University Press, 2002. Pp. xiii+290.
  40. English prefixation-a typological shift?
  41. The Morphology of Dutch (review)
  42. Can we watch regional dialects developing in colonial English?
  43. Hitting a moving target
  44. Adjective Boosters in the English of Young New Zealanders
  45. 3. What you can do with derivational morphology
  46. The diacritic for velarization
  47. Morphological Productivity
  48. Contextual Clues to Word-Meaning
  49. An Acoustic Study of the Vowels of New Zealand English
  50. 3. The dialectal origins of New Zealand English
  51. On the Origins of the New Zealand English Accent
  52. The Fat Owl of the Remove meets the Ness Peril!
  53. Is the morpheme dead?
  54. When is a sequence of two nouns a compound in English?
  55. Review of Orsman (1997): The Dictionary of New Zealand English: New Zealand Words and Their Origins
  56. Is there a class of neoclassical compounds, and if so is it productive?
  57. A class of English irregular verbs∗
  58. Evaluative Morphology
  59. Linjedansere og pantomine på sirkhus: Folkeetymologi som morfologisk omtolkning. [Tight-rope artists and pantomime at the circus: Folk etymology as morphological reinterpretation.]By Helge Gundersen
  60. Getting into a flap! /t/ in New Zealand English
  61. Word-Formation in the Playground
  62. Structural Analogy
  63. More -Ee Words
  64. Word Families
  65. The Second Great Vowel Shift Revisited
  66. Markedness, markedness inversion, and dependency phonology
  67. LEVEL DISORDER: THE CASE OF -er AND -or
  68. Be-heading the word
  69. The Verb HAVE in New Zealand English
  70. Number agreement with collective nouns in New Zealand English
  71. What is lenition?
  72. -ee by Gum!
  73. Notes on New Zealand English Phonetics and Phonology
  74. Review of Lightner (1983): Introduction to English Derivational Morphology
  75. Linking /r/ in RP: some facts
  76. Consonant Strength Hierarchies and Danish
  77. Stress in compounds: A rejoinder
  78. Review of Ruhlen (1976): A Guide to the Languages of the World
  79. English Word-Formation
  80. That vowel shift again
  81. Peter Ladefoged,a course in Phonetics, harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., New York, 1975, pp xiv + 296
  82. Chambers Universal Learners' Dictionary. E.M. Kirkpatrick, editor. Edinburgh: Chambers, 1980
  83. D. R. Calvert, Descriptive Phonetics. (Pp. xiv + 247. Brian C. Decker: New York, 1980.)
  84. Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English. London: Longman, 1978
  85. The second Great Vowel Shift?
  86. On the need for pragmatics in the study of nominal compounding
  87. Some thoughts on dependency grammar
  88. Blends: Core and periphery
  89. ENGLISH IN NEW ZEALAND
  90. Classical Morphemics: Assumptions, Extensions, and Alternatives
  91. Compounds and Minor Word-Formation Types
  92. Lexical word-formation
  93. The Illusory Distinction between Lexical and Encyclopedic Information