All Stories

  1. “Don’t go getting into trouble again!”
  2. Corpus-based Research on Variation in English Legal Discourse
  3. The Great Complement Shift revisited
  4. Motion events in English: the emergence and diachrony of manner salience from Old English to Late Modern English
  5. Paths in the development of elaborative discourse markers: Evidence from Spanish
  6. Rethinking Grammaticalization
  7. Theoretical and Empirical Issues in Grammaticalization
  8. Bettelou Los, The rise of the to-infinitive. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. Pp. xvi+335.
  9. Editorial note
  10. Report on the 38th Annual Meeting of the Societas Linguistica Europaea (Valencia, 7–10 September 2005)
  11. This is a review of the volume in the title.
  12. Teresa Fanego, María José López-Couso, and Javier Pérez-Guerra (eds.), English historical syntax and morphology: selected papers from the 11th ICEHL, Santiago de Compostela, 7–11 September 2000. Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 223. Amsterdam and Ph...
  13. On reanalysis and actualization in syntactic change
  14. Some strategies for coding sentential subjects in English
  15. I English Language
  16. English Historical Syntax and Morphology
  17. Sounds, Words, Texts and Change
  18. Introduction
  19. Introduction
  20. I English Language
  21. I English Language
  22. I English Language
  23. Developments in argument linking in early Modern English gerund phrases
  24. Book reviews
  25. On patterns of complementation with verbs of effort1
  26. English remember and role and reference grammar: On Van Valin and Wilkins (1993)
  27. English remember and Role and Reference Grammar: On Van Valin and Wilkins (1993)
  28. The Development of Gerunds as Objects of Subject-Control Verbs in English (1400-1760)
  29. THE GERUND IN EARLY MODERN ENGLISH: EVIDENCE FROM THE HELSINKI CORPUS
  30. Infinitive Marking in Early Modern English
  31. On the origin and history of the English syntactic type(and) none but he to marry with Nan Page
  32. Finite complement clauses in Shakespeare's English. II
  33. Finite complement clauses in Shakespeare's English. I∗
  34. Variation in sentential complements in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English: a processing-based explanation
  35. 89. History of English Historical Linguistics: Southern Europe