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Table of contents
Dedicatory prefacev
Lemmatization — the case of ‘Catalpa’1 Marking and frequency in the english verb11 Complements and humours29 Problems in dyirbal dialectology43 The phonological representation of the welsh mutations75 Has every sentence a theme and a rheme?97 Isophones or isographs? A problem in historical dialectology117 The de-automization of meaning: from Priestley’s ‘An inspector calls’129 Rhymes and reasons, the practice of two poets169 two geminate consonants in old english?187 Borrow, calgue and switch: The law of the english frontier203 The stylistic analysis of poetic texts: Owen’s ‘Futility’ and Davie’s ‘the garden party’239 Old english Man ‘One’: two notes277 Simplifying the grammar of english285 Verbal aspect: a slavonic-english comparison307 Communicative needs in the learning and use of english321 Supplementing corpus elicitation379 Latin for old english in anglo-saxon manuscripts395 Wh- and Yes/no questions: Charles butler’s grammar (1633) and the history of a linguistic concept401 Some aspects of the history of the Be+ing construction427 A note on the indefinite article475 Written language as a heterogeneous system485