Gregory J. Poarch
List of John Benjamins publications in which Gregory J. Poarch is involved.
Book series
Title
English Sentence Constructions
Marjolijn H. Verspoor, Tim Kassenberg, Merel Keijzer and Gregory J. Poarch
English Sentence Constructions departs from a usage-based theoretical perspective in which all language units -- which we refer to as constructions -- have both a meaning and form, and context is all-important in determining the function and form of these constructions. … read more[Not in series, 240] 2022. 261 pp.
2026 Chapter 18. JASP for (web-based) statistics Digital and Internet-Based Research Methods in Applied Linguistics, Kessler, Matt (ed.), pp. 386–411 | Chapter
JASP is one of the most user-friendly open-source software programs for data analysis available today, and it has recently also become available online through rollApp. This chapter provides a hands-on introduction to quantitative data analysis using this web-based version of JASP and will guide… read more
2025 Are we speaking the same language? Towards a more unified conception of translanguaging Epistemological issue: Translanguaging, Flores, Cristina and Neal Snape (eds.), pp. 72–76 | Commentary
2019 Chapter 14. Does performance on executive function tasks correlate? Evidence from child trilinguals, bilinguals, and second language learners Bilingualism, Executive Function, and Beyond: Questions and insights, Sekerina, Irina A., Lauren Spradlin and Virginia Valian (eds.), pp. 223–236 | Chapter
Recent discussion has questioned how well standard executive function tasks tap executive function processes and the convergent validity across executive function tasks. The present study reanalyses data from a study on executive function in children (Poarch & van Hell, 2012a), building empirically… read more
2017 Anders, of toch niet? Het Nederlandse pronominale genus door de bril van Duitse NVT-leerders Dutch Journal of Applied Linguistics 6:2, pp. 147–173 | Article
Both in Dutch and to a lesser extent in German, pronouns can agree with a noun’s lexical gender or be chosen on semantic grounds. It is well-known that for non-human antecedents, Dutch seems to be shifting towards a more semantic system, via a process labelled ‘hersemantisering’, in which gender… read more





