Journal of Historical Linguistics

Main information
General Editors
ORCiD logo with linkSilvia Luraghi | University of Pavia & University of Henan | silvia.luraghi at unipv.it
ORCiD logo with linkGuglielmo Inglese | University of Turin | guglielmo.inglese at unito.it
Review Editor
ORCiD logo with linkThanasis Georgakopoulos | Aristotle University of Thessaloniki | athanasphil at gmail.com
Editorial Assistant
Associate Editors
Anna Bugaeva | Tokyo University of Science
ORCiD logo with linkEitan Grossman | Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Johann-Mattis List | University of Passau
ORCiD logo with linkVeronica Orqueda | Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Na'ama Pat-El | The University of Texas at Austin
ORCiD logo with linkMatthias Urban | University of Tübingen
Founding Editors
ORCiD logo with linkEugenio R. Luján | University of Madrid Complutense

Journal metrics

Impact Factor: 0.7 (5-year: 0.8)
Journal Citation Indicator: 0.91
CiteScore: 1.9
SNIP: 1.318 SJR: 0.262

This journal is peer reviewed and indexed in: ANVUR Riviste scientifiche (ANVUR ) ; CNKI Scholar ; Dimensions ; ERIH PLUS ; Glottolog ; IBR/IBZ ; Linguistic Bibliography/Bibliographie Linguistique ; Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA ) ; MLA International Bibliography ; Scopus ; WoS Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI )

The Journal of Historical Linguistics aims to publish, after peer-review, papers that make a significant contribution to the theory and/or methodology of historical linguistics. Papers dealing with any language or language family are welcome. Papers should have a diachronic orientation and should offer new perspectives, refine existing methodologies, or challenge received wisdom, on the basis of careful analysis of extant historical data. We are especially keen to publish work which links historical linguistics to corpus-based research, linguistic typology, language variation, language contact, or the study of language and cognition, all of which constitute a major source of methodological renewal for the discipline and shed light on aspects of language change. Contributions in areas such as diachronic corpus linguistics or diachronic typology are therefore particularly welcome.

The Journal of Historical Linguistics publishes its articles Online First.

ISSN: 2210-2116 | E-ISSN: 2210‑2124
DOI logo with link
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhl
Latest articles

23 March 2026

  • The interplay of structural ambiguity and reanalysis
    Elena Smirnova
  • 10 March 2026

  • Interaction of scope and cliticization domain: The case of Hittite enclitic markers
    Andrei Sideltsev
  • 2 March 2026

  • Morir morirás ‘for certain you will die’: Strategies for translating the Hebrew infinitive absolute in medieval and early modern Spanish Bibles
    Andrés Enrique-AriasKatharina Gerhalter
  • On the distinction between ambiguity and vagueness in grammatical change
    Yueh Hsin KuoNadine Dietrich
  • Modeling sound change in a dialectically heterogeneous community: The case of Rhotacism in central Borneo
    Alexander Smith
  • 19 February 2026

  • Sound changes are selected by a bias against morphotactic ambiguity
    Irene Böhm, Nikolaus RittTheresa Matzinger
  • 9 February 2026

  • On the historical link between accent and aspiration in Basque
    José Ignacio Hualde
  • 5 January 2026

  • Syntactic ambiguity and ambiguity avoidance in language comprehension and production
    Claudia Felser
  • 18 December 2025

  • Editors’ corner
    JHL 15:3 (2025) pp. 363–364
  • 16 December 2025

  • Diachronic change in Spanish ‘liking’ constructions: A case of analogical extension through a multiplicity of source constructions
    Andrea Mojedano Batel
  • 2 December 2025

  • From and towards demonstratives: Grammaticalization processes and beyond
    Verónica OrquedaBerta González Saavedra | JHL 15:2 (2025) pp. 173–175
  • 6 September 2025

  • On the origin and development of the Albanian demonstratives
    Sergio Neri | JHL 15:2 (2025) pp. 315–342
  • 26 August 2025

  • Joint innovation: An alternative to the initiation-diffusion and speaker-listener dichotomies in language change
    Joan BybeeRena Torres Cacoullos
  • 29 July 2025

  • The history of the Basque pronoun zuek ‘you all’ and the role of demonstratives as plural markers
    Julen Manterola, Céline MounoleJosé Ignacio Hualde | JHL 15:2 (2025) pp. 263–291
  • 6 June 2025

  • Demonstrative modifiers in Middle Hungarian: A complex picture of renewal
    Barbara Egedi | JHL 15:2 (2025) pp. 292–314
  • 3 June 2025

  • Pathways to demonstratives and beyond
    Marianne Mithun | JHL 15:2 (2025) pp. 176–203
  • 26 May 2025

  • From demonstratives to articles in the Celtic languages
    Eugenio R. LujánEsteban Ngomo Fernández | JHL 15:2 (2025) pp. 343–362
  • 15 May 2025

  • From spatial noun to addressee-oriented demonstrative: Khalkha Mongolian naa-d=čin and caa-d=čin
    Benjamin BrosigDolgor Guntsetseg | JHL 15:2 (2025) pp. 230–262
  • 2 May 2025

  • Passing is giving: The origin and historical development of the polyfunctional morpheme ti42 in Tunxi Hui Chinese
    Wen LuMan-Shan Hui
  • 10 February 2025

  • Position-dependent polarity in the Alor-Pantar languages and its origins
    Bastian PersohnAntoinette Schapper
  • 6 January 2025

  • Crosslinguistic perspectives on the source of first/second person pronouns: With special reference to demonstratives
    Osamu Ishiyama | JHL 15:2 (2025) pp. 204–229
  • 9 December 2024

  • Musk deer are inherited: The reconstruction of the onset *t.ɬj- in Proto-Gyalrongic
    Yunfan Lai
  • When never meant ever : The polarity item nunca in Old Portuguese
    Clara Pinto
  • 2 December 2024

  • How fear developed from an object to a subject experiencer verb: Remarks on argument structure change
    Richard Zimmermann
  • 29 November 2024

  • Reply to Kassian et al. (2023). Calibrated weighted permutation test detects ancient language connections in the Circumpolar area (Chukotian-Nivkh and Yukaghir-Samoyedic)
    Andrea Ceolin | JHL 15:3 (2025) pp. 482–494
  • IssuesOnline-first articles

    Volume 15 (2025)

    Volume 14 (2024)

    Volume 13 (2023)

    Volume 12 (2022)

    Volume 11 (2021)

    Volume 10 (2020)

    Volume 9 (2019)

    Volume 8 (2018)

    Volume 7 (2017)

    Volume 6 (2016)

    Volume 5 (2015)

    Volume 4 (2014)

    Volume 3 (2013)

    Volume 2 (2012)

    Volume 1 (2011)

    Editorial info
    General Editors
    ORCiD logo with linkSilvia Luraghi | University of Pavia & University of Henan | silvia.luraghi at unipv.it
    ORCiD logo with linkGuglielmo Inglese | University of Turin | guglielmo.inglese at unito.it
    Review Editor
    ORCiD logo with linkThanasis Georgakopoulos | Aristotle University of Thessaloniki | athanasphil at gmail.com
    Editorial Assistant
    Associate Editors
    Anna Bugaeva | Tokyo University of Science
    ORCiD logo with linkEitan Grossman | Hebrew University of Jerusalem
    Johann-Mattis List | University of Passau
    ORCiD logo with linkVeronica Orqueda | Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
    Na'ama Pat-El | The University of Texas at Austin
    ORCiD logo with linkMatthias Urban | University of Tübingen
    Founding Editors
    ORCiD logo with linkEugenio R. Luján | University of Madrid Complutense
    Advisory Board
    Concepción Company Company | Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
    ORCiD logo with linkWolfgang U. Dressler | Austrian Academy of Sciences
    Jan Terje Faarlund | University of Oslo
    Elly van Gelderen | Arizona State University
    Dag T.T. Haug | University of Oslo
    ORCiD logo with linkBernd Heine | University of Cologne
    Willem B. Hollmann | Lancaster University
    Paul J. Hopper | Carnegie Mellon University
    Ritsuko Kikusawa | National Museum of Ethnology, Japan
    Harold Koch | Australian National University
    Leonid Kulikov | Ghent University
    Rosemarie Lühr | University of Jena
    ORCiD logo with linkMarianne Mithun | University of California, Santa Barbara
    Geoffrey S. Nathan | Wayne State University
    ORCiD logo with linkMuriel Norde | Humboldt-Universität, Berlin
    ORCiD logo with linkJoseph C. Salmons | University of Wisconsin
    John Charles Smith | University of Oxford
    Ans M.C. van Kemenade | Radboud University, Nijmegen
    Subscription Info
    Current issue: 15:3, available as of December 2025

    General information about our electronic journals.

    Subscription rates

    All prices for print + online include postage/handling.

    Online-onlyPrint + online
    Volume 16 (2026): 3 issues; ca. 500 pp.EUR 255.00EUR 353.00

    Individuals may apply for a special online-only subscription rate of EUR 55.00 per volume.
    Private subscriptions are for personal use only, and must be pre-paid and ordered directly from the publisher.

    Available back-volumes

    Online-onlyPrint + online
    Complete backset
    (Vols. 1‒15; 2011‒2025)
    39 issues;
    5,900 pp.
    EUR 2,981.00EUR 3,429.00
    Volume 15 (2025) 3 issues; 500 pp.EUR 248.00EUR 333.00
    Volume 14 (2024) 3 issues; 450 pp.EUR 229.00EUR 288.00
    Volume 13 (2023) 3 issues; 450 pp.EUR 222.00EUR 262.00
    Volumes 10‒12 (2020‒2022) 3 issues; avg. 450 pp.EUR 222.00 per volumeEUR 257.00 per volume
    Volume 9 (2019) 3 issues; 450 pp.EUR 218.00EUR 252.00
    Volume 8 (2018) 3 issues; 450 pp.EUR 212.00EUR 245.00
    Volume 7 (2017) 3 issues; 450 pp.EUR 206.00EUR 238.00
    Volume 6 (2016) 2 issues; 300 pp.EUR 165.00EUR 185.00
    Volume 5 (2015) 2 issues; 300 pp.EUR 165.00EUR 180.00
    Volume 4 (2014) 2 issues; 300 pp.EUR 165.00EUR 175.00
    Volume 3 (2013) 2 issues; 300 pp.EUR 165.00EUR 170.00
    Volumes 1‒2 (2011‒2012) 2 issues; avg. 300 pp.EUR 160.00 per volumeEUR 165.00 per volume
    Author info

    The Journal of Historical Linguistics has an online submission portal; please consult the Short Guide to EM for Authors before you submit your paper. Regular submissions via email are also considered. See below for contact information.

    Submissions should fit the aim and scope of the journal. JHL will consider articles up to a maximum of 15,000 words (incl. notes and references); authors are kindly asked to be as concise as possible.

    At the initial stage in the process, it is not yet necessary that submissions adhere to the journal's style sheet. Texts should be double-spaced, printed on one side of the page only, with all pages numbered consecutively. Figures, charts and tables can be left in the appropriate place in the manuscript. In order to permit double-blind refereeing, submissions should not carry author information. Contributors who are not native speakers of English should have their manuscript carefully checked by a native speaker.

    If your paper is accepted for publication, you will be asked to submit a final version prepared according to the JHL Stylesheet (PDF).

    Please note that any material submitted to JHL must be original work, not published or under review elsewhere, and contributors may not submit this work elsewhere while it is under review for this journal. If related material has been published or is under consideration or in press elsewhere, that must be disclosed to the editors. Similarly, if part of a contribution has appeared or will appear elsewhere, contributors must specify the details in a cover letter accompanying the submission.

    Contact information:

    General Editors Review Editor
    Silvia Luraghi Thanasis Georgakopoulos
    silvia.luraghi at unipv.it athanasphil at gmail.com
    Guglielmo Inglese  
    guglielmo.inglese at unito.it  

     

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    Authors and reviewers are kindly requested to read this Ethics Statement.

    Please also note the guidance on (the declaration of) the use of Artificial Intelligence.

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    Open Access

    Articles accepted for this journal can be made Open Access through payment of an Article Publication Charge (APC) of EUR 1800 (excl. tax). To arrange this, please contact openaccess at benjamins.nl as soon as your paper has been accepted for publication. More information can be found on the publisher's Open Access Policy page.

    Corresponding authors from institutions with which John Benjamins has a Read & Publish arrangement can publish Open Access without paying a fee. Please consult this list of institutions for up-to-date information on which articles qualify.

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