Review published In: Journal of Historical Pragmatics
Vol. 15:1 (2014) ► pp.149–152
Book review
. Early Modern English Dialogues: Spoken Interaction as Writing [Studies in English Language]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010. ISBN 978-521-83541-1 472 pp.
Reviewed by
Published online: 28 February 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.15.1.06hun
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.15.1.06hun
References (7)
ARCHER = A Representative Corpus of Historical English Registers. 1990–1993. Compiled by Douglas Biber, and Edward Finegan. at Northern Arizona University and the University of Southern California.
Baron, Alistair, and Paul Rayson. 2008. “VARD 2: A Tool for Dealing with Spelling Variation in Historical Corpora.” In Proceedings of the Postgraduate Conference in Corpus Linguistics, Aston University, Birmingham, 22 May 2008. Available at: [URL] (accessed 12 December 2012).
Biber, Douglas, and Edward Finegan. 1989. “Drift and Evolution of English Style: A History of Three Genres.” Language 65 (3): 487–517.
CED = Corpus of Early English Correspondence. 2006. Compiled by Merja Kytö, and Jonathan Culpeper. at the University of Uppsala and Lancaster University.
Koch, Peter. 1999. “Court Records and Cartoons: Reflections of Spontaneous Dialogue in Early Romance Texts.” In Historical Dialogue Analysis, ed. by Andreas H. Jucker, Gerd Fritz, and Franz Lebsaft. 399–429. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Nevalainen, Terttu, and Helena Raumolin-Brunberg. 2003. Historical Sociolinguistics: Language Change in Tudor and Stuart England. London: Pearson Education.
Schneider, Gerold. 2012. “Adapting a Parser to Historical English.” In Outposts of Historical Corpus Linguistics: From the Helsinki Corpus to a Proliferation of Resources. (Varieng. Studies in Variation, Contacts and Change in English 10), ed. by Jukka Tyrkkö, Matti Kilpiö, Terttu Nevalainen, and Matti Rissanen. Available at: [URL] (accessed 12 December 2012).
