In:Language Contact and Development around the North Sea
Edited by Merja Stenroos, Martti Mäkinen and Inge Særheim
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 321] 2012
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 18 April 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.321.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.321.toc
Table of contents
Preface & Acknowledgments
Editors’ introduction
Part I. The evidence of place-names
Celts in Scandinavian Scotland and Anglo-Saxon England: Place-names and language contact reconsidered
The colonisation of England by Germanic tribes on the basis of place-names
Ancient toponyms in south-west Norway: Origin and formation
Part II. Code selection in written texts
On vernacular literacy in late medieval Norway
Four languages, one text type: The neighbours’ books of Bryggen 1529–1936
On variation and change in London medieval mixed-language business documents
Part III. Linguistic developments and contact situations
Old English–Late British language contact and the English progressive
The Old English origins of the Northern Subject Rule: Evidence from the Lindisfarne gloss to the Gospels of John and Mark
For Heaven’s sake: The Scandinavian contribution to a semantic field in Old and Middle English
North Sea timber trade terminology in the Early Modern period: The cargo inventory for the White Lamb revisited
‘Nornomania’ in the research on language in the Northern Isles
Index of subjects, terms & languages
