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Main page » Non-Fiction » Science literature » Linguistics » Studies in Early Modern English vol.13


Studies in Early Modern English vol.13

 

Initial adverbials and word order in English with special reference to the Early Modern English period

Are Shakespeare’s agent nouns different from Chaucer’s? – On the dynamics of a derivational sub-system

The construction be going to + infinitive in Early Modern English

“Sumer is icumen in”: the seasons of the year in Middle English and Early Modern English

The place-name evidence for the distribution of Early Modern English dialect features: the voicing of initial /f-/

Text deixis in Early Modern English

On phrasal verbs in Early Modern English: notes on lexis and style

The use of thou and you in Early Modern spoken English: evidence from depositions in the Durham ecclesiastical court records

Orthoepists and reformers

Vocalisation of “post-vocalic r” — an Early Modern English sound change?

From stress-timing to syllable-timing: changes in the prosodic system of Late Middle English and Early Modern English

Lexical semantics and the Early Modern English lexicon: the case of antonymy

Early Modern English passive constructions

nfl in Early Modern English and the Status of to

Aspects of adverbial change in Early Modern English

Periodization in language history: Early Modern English and the other periods

Degree adverbs in Early Modern English

The ugly sister – Scots words in Early Modern English dictionaries

The development of the compound pronouns in -body and -one in Early Modern English

Social conditioning and diachronic language change

The position of not in Early Modern English questions

William Turner and the English plant names

The history of the English language and future English teachers

You that be not able to consyder thys order of thinges: Variability and change in the semantics and syntax of a mental verb in Early Modern English

The expression of deontic and epistemic modality and the subjunctive

Any as an indefinite determiner in non-assertive clauses: evidence from Present-day and Early Modern English

Loss of postvocalic r: Were the orthoepists really tone-deaf?

Early Modern London business English

The mystery of the modal progressive




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Tags: English, Early, Modern, Middle, place-name