All Stories

  1. Editorial announcement
  2. Broadening the Spectrum of Corpus Linguistics
  3. You don’t get to see that every day
  4. Modality and Diachronic Construction Grammar
  5. Intersubjectification in constructional change
  6. Unity and diversity in grammaticalization scenarios, Bisang, Walter & Andrej Malchukov
  7. Higher-order schemas in morphology: What they are, how they work, and where to find them
  8. Joel Olofsson: Förflyttning på svenska: Om produktivitet utifrån ett konstruktionsperspektiv
  9. Preface
  10. Ian Roberts. 2017. The Wonders of Language. Or How to Make Noises and Influence People. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 230 S.
  11. A distributional semantic approach to the periodization of change in the productivity of constructions
  12. Why are grammatical elements more evenly dispersed than lexical elements? Assessing the roles of text frequency and semantic generality
  13. Colloquialization in journalistic writing
  14. Using token-based semantic vector spaces for corpus-linguistic analyses: From practical applications to tests of theoretical claims
  15. Change in modal meanings
  16. Constructions across Grammars
  17. How do corpus-based techniques advance description and theory in English historical linguistics? An introduction to the special issue
  18. Usage-based cognitive-functional linguistics: From theory to method and back again
  19. A corpus-based, cross-linguistic approach to mental predicates and their complementation: Performativity and descriptivity vis-à-vis boundedness and picturability
  20. Hendrik De Smet, Spreading Patterns. Diffusional Change in the English System of Complementation
  21. From hand-carved to computer-based: Noun-participle compounding and the upward strengthening hypothesis
  22. New Trends in Nordic and General Linguistics
  23. Christopher S. Butler & Francisco Gonzálvez-García: Exploring functional-cognitive space
  24. Reflections on Constructions across Grammars
  25. Reflections on Constructions across Grammars
  26. Constructional tolerance
  27. Stefan Thim. Phrasal Verbs: The English Verb-Particle Construction and its History
  28. Review of Taylor (2012): The Mental Corpus. How Language is Represented in the Mind
  29. Editorial
  30. Collostructional analysis
  31. Corpus-based Approaches to Constructional Change
  32. Space in Language and Linguistics
  33. Diachronic collostructional analysis meets the noun phrase: Studying many a noun in COHA
  34. Variability-based neighbor clustering: A bottom-up approach to periodization in historical linguistics
  35. Dynamic visualizations of language change
  36. Grammaticalization in Germanic languages
  37. A Cognitive Linguistic Perspective on Counterfactuality
  38. Diachronic collostructional analysis: How to use it and how to deal with confounding factors
  39. Modeling diachronic change in the third person singular: a multifactorial, verb- and author-specific exploratory approach
  40. An empirical approach to the use and comprehension of mixed metaphors
  41. An empirical approach to the use and comprehension of mixed metaphors
  42. Cognitive Corpus Linguistics: five points of debate on current theory and methodology
  43. The force dynamics of English complement clauses: A Collostructional Analysis
  44. Comparing comparatives
  45. What can synchronic gradience tell us about reanalysis?
  46. The German mit-predicative construction
  47. Constructional Change in English
  48. A quantitative approach to the development of complex predicates
  49. The co-evolution of syntactic and pragmatic complexity
  50. The English comparative – language structure and language use
  51. A quantitative approach to the development of complex predicates
  52. Germanic Future Constructions
  53. The identification of stages in diachronic data: variability-based neighbour clustering
  54. New evidence against the modularity of grammar: Constructions, collocations, and speech perception
  55. Lenker, Ursula and Anneli Meurman-Solin (eds.), Connectives in the History of English
  56. Just because it's new doesn't mean people will notice it
  57. Review of Fried & Östman (2004): Construction Grammar in a Cross-Language Perspective
  58. Chained metonymies in lexicon and grammar
  59. A synchronic perspective on the grammaticalization of Swedish Future constructions
  60. Auxiliaries in spoken Sinhala
  61. Review of Lindquist & Mair (2004): Corpus approaches to grammaticalization in English
  62. Distinctive collexeme analysis and diachrony
  63. Auxiliaries in spoken Sinhala
  64. Introduction
  65. Data and methodology
  66. Constructional change in allomorphy
  67. Constructional change in syntax
  68. Conclusions
  69. References
  70. Integrating the perspectives on language and space
  71. Constructional change in word formation
  72. Appendix: a logistic regression model of mine and my
  73. Introducing new trends in Nordic linguistic research