Chapter
A plea for phraseo-stylistics
pp.:
61 – 75
Kruszewski’s contribution to general linguistic theory
pp.:
75 – 87
Language universals, linguistic theory, and philosophy
pp.:
87 – 111
Semantic features and prototype theory in English lexicology
pp.:
111 – 119
Some remarks on transformations
pp.:
119 – 129
Rhythm in stress-timed and syllable-timed languages: some general considerations
pp.:
129 – 139
On the problem of meaning in sociolinguistic studies of syntactic variation
pp.:
139 – 145
Grammar as speaker’s knowledge versus grammar as linguists’ characterization of norms
pp.:
145 – 159
Concepts, fields, and ‘non-basic’ lexical items
pp.:
159 – 169
Syntactic ambiguity: a systematic accident
pp.:
169 – 179
Generated or degenerate? Two forms of linguistic competence
pp.:
179 – 191
Part II. Historical linguistics
pp.:
191 – 209
An etymology for the aquatic ‘acker/aiker’ in English, and other grains of truth?
pp.:
209 – 211
Contrasting fact with fiction: the common denominator in internal reconstruction, with a bibliography
pp.:
211 – 217
On Old English gefrœgnod in Beowulf 1333 a
pp.:
217 – 227
Medieval English scribal practice: some questions and some assumptions
pp.:
227 – 233
Remarques sur les dérivés chez Richard Rolle: Où en est la morphologie?
pp.:
233 – 245
Cautions about loan words and sound correspondences
pp.:
245 – 255
A cœ̄ġ to Old English syllable structure
pp.:
255 – 259
F for Fisiak: a feuilleton
pp.:
259 – 265
Interlanguage simplification in Middle English vowel phonology?
pp.:
265 – 273
Romance loans in Middle English: a re-assessment
pp.:
273 – 287
The phonology of Modern French loanwords in present-day English
pp.:
287 – 301
Modern English cruive ‘wicker salmon-trap’
pp.:
301 – 311
Consecutives and serials in Indo-European
pp.:
311 – 327
More about the textual functions of the Old English adverbial þa
pp.:
327 – 335
The relative clauses in Beowulf
pp.:
335 – 345
On language contact and syntactic change
pp.:
345 – 351
Middle English – a Creole?
pp.:
351 – 363
German Baum, English beam
pp.:
363 – 379
English ought (to)
pp.:
379 – 381
On syncope in Old English
pp.:
381 – 393
Some properties of analogical innovation
pp.:
393 – 401
On the syntax and semantics of free relative clauses in English and Romanian
pp.:
393 – 403
An inquiry into the nature of mixed grammars: two cases of grammatical variation in dialectal British English
pp.:
401 – 405
Modal verbs in English and Danish
pp.:
403 – 421
The drift toward agentivity and the development of the perfective use of have + pp. in English
pp.:
405 – 415
Case and rhyme in LaƷamon’s Brut
pp.:
415 – 421
Intensive language teaching: practice, problems, and prospects
pp.:
421 – 433
The influence of a century’s language planning on upper-class speech in Oslo
pp.:
421 – 431
The grammar of German haben
pp.:
423 – 425
The English prosody /h/
pp.:
425 – 443
Diachronic word-formation in a functional perspective
pp.:
431 – 443
Textlinguistic analysis of German and English curricula vitae
pp.:
433 – 441
New aspects for foreign language learning and teaching from conversational analysis
pp.:
441 – 457
The progress of the expression of temporal relationships from Old English to Early Middle English
pp.:
443 – 457
On stress in Polish
pp.:
443 – 455
Some remarks on cleft sentences in present-day English
pp.:
455 – 459
The origin of the Old English dialects
pp.:
457 – 471
Tertium Comparationis in contrastive sociolinguistics
pp.:
457 – 471
Euro-English
pp.:
459 – 471
More on pragmatic equivalence
pp.:
471 – 485
Metaphor in the English lexicon: the verb
pp.:
471 – 481
A Middle English dialect boundary
pp.:
471 – 477
The development of the category of gender in the Slavic languages
pp.:
477 – 493
A note on reverse wh-clefts in English
pp.:
481 – 495
Barriers to intercultural communication between Americans and Japanese
pp.:
485 – 495
Words without etyma: Germanic ‘tooth’
pp.:
493 – 507
Language teaching in a prototypical situation
pp.:
495 – 511
A case-study in the dynamics of written communication
pp.:
495 – 503
Towards a definition of semantic constraints on negative prefixation in English and German
pp.:
503 – 521
Reflexes of PIE d < t’
pp.:
507 – 517
How do indexicals fit into situations? On deixis in English and Polish
pp.:
511 – 527
Germanic and other Indo-European languages
pp.:
517 – 525
Autosegments, linked matrices, and the Irish lenition
pp.:
521 – 535
Cantar de Mio Cid Y. 2375
pp.:
525 – 535
An Elizabethan contrastive grammar of Spanish and French
pp.:
527 – 541
The minimal distance principle revisited
pp.:
535 – 553
Some verbal remarks
pp.:
535 – 547
The interdisciplinary framework of the theory-dynamic phase in finalized linguistics
pp.:
541 – 549
A note on Dr. Johnson’s History of the English language
pp.:
547 – 559
Concerning the correction and non-correction of language-learners’ errors
pp.:
549 – 559
Remarks on Lakoff’s classification of verbs
pp.:
553 – 579
Complementation in Ælfric’s Colloquy
pp.:
559 – 567
English traditional grammars in the nineteenth century
pp.:
559 – 571
Metathesis
pp.:
567 – 581
Language learners’ errors in a pedagogical perspective
pp.:
571 – 595
Metathese im arabischen Dialekt von Tunis
pp.:
579 – 591
An analysis of the Old Saxon velar consonants in initial position
pp.:
581 – 591
Undergytan as a ‘Winchester’ word
pp.:
591 – 603
Question-orientation versus answer-orientation in English interrogative clauses
pp.:
591 – 607
Migranten und autochthone Sprachgruppen
pp.:
595 – 615
The Germanic possessive type dem Vater sein Haus
pp.:
603 – 613
The tag syntagm of spoken English
pp.:
607 – 627
Middle English translations of Old English charters in the Liber Monasterii de Hyda: a case of historical error analysis
pp.:
613 – 625
Expository paragraph structure in Slavic and Romance languages
pp.:
615 – 625
The effects of language standardization on deletion rules: some comparative Germanic evidence from t/d-deletion
pp.:
625 – 639
Glimpses into trends of contrastive linguistics and error analysis at AILA’s world congresses from Cambridge (1968) to Brussels (1984)
pp.:
625 – 635
The function of prefixation in the assignment of aspect to the Polish verb
pp.:
627 – 637
Some recent approaches to equivalence in Contrastive Studies
pp.:
635 – 643
A prototype approach to denominal adjectives
pp.:
637 – 647
Degemination in Old English and the formal apparatus of generative phonology
pp.:
639 – 655
On different types of translation
pp.:
643 – 659
The case of American Polish
pp.:
647 – 659
Old English Northumbrian verb inflection revisited
pp.:
655 – 671
The semantics of antonymic pairs of adjectives: elicitation test evidence from English and Polish
pp.:
659 – 665
On some recent claims concerning derivational morphology
pp.:
659 – 669
The mother tongue and the foreign language in interaction
pp.:
665 – 681
Sentence stress and category membership
pp.:
669 – 695
Syllable theory and Old English verse: a preliminary observation
pp.:
671 – 685
Creating new grammars: on theoretical approaches to second language acquisition
pp.:
681 – 695
Hebrew loan words in English
pp.:
685 – 693
On delimiting the senses of near-synonyms in historical semantics. A case-study of adjectives of ‘moral sufficiency’ in the Old English Andreas
pp.:
693 – 705
Definitions and first person pronoun involvement in Thomas Elyot’s Dictionary
pp.:
695 – 703
Paraphrase strategies and the teaching of translation
pp.:
703 – 713
An emotionally conditioned split of some personal names
pp.:
705 – 727
The possibilities of may and can
pp.:
707 – 711
Zur formalen Variabilität der deutschen Morpheme
pp.:
711 – 721
A processing explanation for a syntactic difference between English and Polish
pp.:
713 – 723
Part IV. Contrastive and applied linguistics
pp.:
721 – 743
Ruckümläut
pp.:
727 – 735
Dialectal speech areas in England: Orton’s lexical evidence
pp.:
735 – 759
LastPages
pp.:
739 – 1597
Prepositions in Welsh and Finnish case-endings: a contrastive study
pp.:
743 – 745
Elements of structuralism in nineteenth century foreign language teaching
pp.:
745 – 753
Context in contrastive linguistics: one and ein
pp.:
753 – 761
The ‘Exmoor Courtship’ and ‘Exmoor Scolding’: an evaluation of two eighteenth-century dialect texts
pp.:
759 – 775
Contrastive linguistics and language typology: the three-way approach
pp.:
761 – 777
The Old English digraph 〈cg〉 again
pp.:
775 – 787
Notes on the terminology of applied linguistics
pp.:
777 – 791
Bantawa rV- An exercise in internal and comparative reconstruction
pp.:
787 – 797
Contrastive linguistics and language typology
pp.:
791 – 393
Proto-Indo-European verbal roots in Sanskrit and Polish
pp.:
797 – 807
Part III. Descriptive linguistics
pp.:
807 – 423