All Stories

  1. Tracing the development of the perfect alternation in Early Modern English
  2. Differences in syntactic annotation affect retrieval
  3. (The) fact is …/(Die) Tatsache ist …focaliser constructions in English and German are similar but subject to different constraints
  4. Progressive or simple? A corpus-based study of aspect in World Englishes
  5. Pluralized non-count nouns across Englishes: A corpus-linguistic approach to variety types
  6. Lieselotte Anderwald: Language Between Description and Prescription. Verbs and Verb Categories in Nineteenth-Century Grammars of English (Oxford Studies in the History of English 6)
  7. Debra Ziegeler. 2015.Converging Grammars: Constructions in Singapore English
  8. Variable article use with acronyms and initialisms
  9. ‘My language, my identity’: negotiating language use and attitudes in the New Zealand Fiji Indian diaspora
  10. Contact, Variation, and Change in the History of English
  11. English in the Indian Diaspora
  12. Home Is Where You’re Born: Negotiating Identity in the Diaspora
  13. Book Review: A Dictionary of South African Indian English, edited by Rajend Mesthrie
  14. Review of Culpeper & Kytö (2010): Early Modern English Dialogues: Spoken Interaction as Writing
  15. The times they are a-changin’ — and so are the editors of EWW
  16. Animacy in early New Zealand English
  17. The hypothetical subjunctive in South Asian Englishes
  18. Mapping Unity and Diversity World-Wide
  19. Exploring Second-Language Varieties of English and Learner Englishes
  20. Short term diachronic shifts in part-of-speech frequencies
  21. What corpora tell us about the grammaticalisation of voice in get-constructions
  22. "Agile" and "Uptight" Genres
  23. New Zealand English Grammar – Fact or Fiction?