In:Middle and Modern English Corpus Linguistics: A multi-dimensional approach
Edited by Manfred Markus, Yoko Iyeiri, Reinhard Heuberger and Emil Chamson
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics 50] 2012
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 11 April 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.50.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.50.toc
Table of contents
List of abbreviations
Corpus linguistics today and tomorrow
Can’t see the wood for the trees? Corpora and the study of Late Modern English
Spelling variation in Middle English manuscripts: The case for an integrated corpus approach
Aspects of language change
The development of compound numerals in English Biblical translations
The complements of causative make in Late Middle English
The pragmaticalization and intensification of verily, truly and really: A corpus-based study on the developments of three truth-identifying adverbs
Concept-driven semasiology and onomasiology of CLERGY: Focus on the lexicogenesis of pope, bishop and priest
ANGER and TĒNE in Middle English
Middle and Modern English case studies
The subjunctive vs. modal auxiliaries: Lest-clauses in Late Middle English prose texts
Some notes on the distribution of the quantifier all in Middle English
Interjections in Middle English: Chaucer’s “Reeve’s Tale” and the Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse
Why and what in Early Modern English drama
Colloquialization and not-contraction in nineteenth-century English
Wright’s English Dialect Dictionary and thereafter
The complexity and diversity of the words in Wright’s English Dialect Dictionary
Etymology in the English Dialect Dictionary
Towards an understanding of Joseph Wright’s sources: White Kennett’s Parochial Antiquities (1695) and the English Dialect Dictionary
The importance of being Janus: Midland speakers and the “North-South Divide”
... ging uns der ganze alte Dialektbegriff in eine Illusion auf: The deterritorialization of dialects in the 20th and 21st centuries
