All Stories

  1. Individuality in complex systems: A constructionist approach
  2. Grammaticalization and the linguistic individual: new avenues in lifespan research
  3. Sociocultural Dimensions of Lexis and Text in the History of English
  4. Introduction
  5. Connecting the past and the present – a response to Pentrel
  6. The extravagant progressive: an experimental corpus study on the history of emphatic [be Ving]
  7. Unidirectionality as a cycle of convention and innovation
  8. Reading the intentions of be going to. On the subjectification of future markers
  9. Review of Traugott & Trousdale (2013): Constructionalization and constructional changes
  10. Lexicalization and grammaticalization
  11. Grammaticalization by changing co-text frequencies, or why [BE Ving] became the ‘progressive’
  12. Why is there a Present-Day English absolute?
  13. Constructions and Environments
  14. What grammar reveals about sex and death: interdisciplinary applications of corpus-based linguistics
  15. Passive auxiliaries in English and German
  16. On ways of being on the way
  17. Review of Moore (2011): Quoting Speech in Early English
  18. On the Distribution and Merger ofIsandBiðin Old and Middle English
  19. General productivity: How become waxed and wax became a copula
  20. The functions of weorðan and its loss in the past tense in Old and Middle English
  21. Constructional change in Old and Middle English Copular Constructions and its impact on the lexicon
  22. 86. History of English Historical Linguistics: The Netherlands and Belgium