All Stories

  1. Do you investigate word order in detail or do you investigate in detail word order? On word order and headedness in the recent history of English
  2. Ellipsis: licensing, structure and identity
  3. Irma Taavitsainen and Päivi Pahta (eds.), Medical writing in Early Modern English (Studies in English Language). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011. Pp. xix + 300. ISBN 978-0-521-11766-1.
  4. A Dimensional Characterisation of Word Order in Modern English Genres
  5. It-clefts in the meta-informative structure of the utterance in Modern and Present-day English
  6. A contrastive analysis of (English) ‘there’ and (Spanish) hay existential sentences
  7. Discourse Status and Syntax in the History of English
  8. An open-sesame approach to English noun phrases: defining the NP (with an introduction to the special issue)
  9. Do some genres or text types become more complex than others?
  10. Word Order After the Loss of the Verb-Second Constraint or the Importance of Early Modern English in the Fixation of Syntactic and Informative (Un-)Markedness
  11. This is a review of the volume in the title.
  12. Discourse on a par with syntax, or the effects of the linguistic organisation of letters on the diachronic characterisation of the text type
  13. Profaning Margery Kempe's tomb or the application of a Constraint-Grammar Parser to a late Middle English text
  14. Teresa Fanego, María José López-Couso, and Javier Pérez-Guerra (eds.), English historical syntax and morphology: selected papers from the 11th ICEHL, Santiago de Compostela, 7–11 September 2000. Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 223. Amsterdam and Ph...
  15. Revisiting English Secondary Predicates: can the Window be Opened Wider?
  16. Review of Pérez-Guerra (1999): Historical English Syntax: A statistical corpus-based study on the organisation of Early Modern English sentences
  17. English Historical Syntax and Morphology
  18. Texting the written evidence: On register analysis in late Middle English and early Modern English
  19. INTEGRATING RIGHT-DISLOCATED CONSTITUENTS: A STUDY ON CLEAVING AND EXTRAPOSITION IN THE RECENT HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE1