All Stories

  1. World Englishes and Dialectology
  2. Measuring the success of prescriptivism: quantitative grammaticography, corpus linguistics and the progressive passive
  3. “Pained the eye and stunned the ear”
  4. I * English Language
  5. Natural language change or prescriptive influence?
  6. I * English Language
  7. Richard J. Whitt. Evidentiality and Perception Verbs in English and German
  8. Variable Past-Tense Forms in Nineteenth-Century American English: Linking Normative Grammars and Language Change
  9. The Morphology of English Dialects: Verb-Formation in Non-Standard EnglishbyLieselotte Anderwald
  10. Clumsy, awkward or having a peculiar propriety? Prescriptive judgements and language change in the 19th century
  11. I * English Language
  12. Norm vs variation in British English irregular verbs: the case of past tense sang vs sung
  13. I * English Language
  14. Are non-standard dialects more ‘natural’ than the standard? A test case from English verb morphology
  15. I * English Language
  16. 53. Corpus linguistics and dialectology
  17. The Morphology of English Dialects
  18. I * English Language
  19. I * English Language
  20. I * English Language
  21. I * English Language
  22. Negative Concord in British English Dialects
  23. I English Language
  24. Negation in Non-Standard British English
  25. I English Language
  26. I English Language
  27. Was/Were-variation in non-standard British English today
  28. I English Language
  29. I English Language
  30. Negation in varieties of English
  31. Preface and thanks
  32. Introduction
  33. Past tense theories
  34. Verb classification
  35. Bibliography
  36. Non-standard English and typological principles: The case of negation
  37. Typology and dialectology: a programmatic sketch
  38. Naturalness and the English past tense system
  39. Selltandknowed: non-standard weak verbs
  40. Comeandrun: non-standard strong verbs with a one-part paradigm
  41. Conclusion: supralocalization and morphological theories
  42. SED localities and list of counties
  43. The decline of the be-perfect, linguistic relativity, and grammar writing in the nineteenth century
  44. Applying typological methods in dialectology
  45. Drunk, seen, doneandeat: two-part paradigms instead of three-part paradigms