All Stories

  1. Stance in CELiST: A vindication of text-reading
  2. CoViD-19 and its impact on scientific writing
  3. Review: Late Modern English Medical Texts: Writing medicine in the eighteenth century.
  4. The making of the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts (CELiST)
  5. The samples in the eighteenth-century Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts
  6. The samples in the nineteenth-century Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts
  7. Exploring the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts
  8. Personal Pronouns in CHET and CECheT: Authorial Presence and Other Nuances Revealed
  9. A Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts (CELIST)
  10. Studying Modern English scientific language
  11. Corpus of English Philosophy Texts (CEPhiT)
  12. Corpus of English Texts on Astronomy (CETA)
  13. Corpus of History English Texts (CHET)
  14. An introduction to CHET
  15. Writing History in Late Modern English
  16. Modal Verbs and Tentativeness in the Coruña Corpus
  17. Genre and change in the Corpus of History English Texts
  18. Linking ideas in women’s writing: evidence from the Coruña Corpus
  19. Late Modern English Texts on Philosophy
  20. Eighteenth Century Women and Science
  21. The Vikings in England
  22. English texts on Astronomy between 1700 and 1900
  23. CETA as a tool for the study of modern astronomy in English
  24. Patterns of use of adjectives in scientific English
  25. CETA in the Context of the Coruna Corpus
  26. Make + adjective in Eighteenth-century English
  27. Position of adjectives in English
  28. “To Lerne Sciences Touching Nombres and Proporciouns”: The Proportion of Affixation in Early Scientific Writing
  29. Review on New Zealand English. Its Origins and Evolution
  30. Adjectives in Middle English
  31. The Adjective in English
  32. Geographical origin of the Parlement of the thre Ages
  33. The Parlement of the Thre Ages: some notes on the place of origin of one of its manuscripts
  34. Origin of a Manuscript of The Parlement of the Three Ages
  35. Scandinavian loans and word-formation
  36. Language contact and language change: the Danes in England
  37. When sex talks
  38. Abstraction as a Means of Expressing Reality: Women Writing Science in Late Modern English: Isabel Moskowich / Leida Maria Monaco