Publications
Brylak, Agnieszka. 2019. Some of Them Just Die Like Horses. Contact-Induced Changes in Peripheral Nahuatl of the Sixteenth-Century Petitions from Santiago de Guatemala. Journal of language contact 12 (2) : 344–377.
Li, Jian. 2019. When a koiné meets larger lingua francas: attrition of English loanwords in Shanghainese induced by new language contacts. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 40 (8) : 721–736.
Overall, Simon E. 2019. Parrots, peccaries, and people. Imagery and metaphor in Aguaruna (Chicham) magic songs. International Journal of Language and Culture 6 (1) : 148–174.
Amiridze, Nino. 2018. Accommodating loan verbs in Georgian: Observations and questions. Journal of Pragmatics 133 : 150–165.
Babel, Anna M. 2016. Affective motivations for borrowing: Performing local identity through loan phonology. Language & Communication 49 : 70–83.
Diez-Arroyo, Marisa. 2016. Vagueness. A loanword’s good friend. The case of ‘print’ in Spanish fashion. Pragmatics 26 (4) : 609–629.
Nielsen, Hans F. and John Ole Askedal, eds. 2015. Early Germanic Languages in Contact. (NOWELE Supplement Series 27). John Benjamins.
Ajsic, Adnan. 2014. Political loanwords: Postwar constitutional arrangement and the co-occurrence tendencies of anglicisms in contemporary Bosnian. Journal of Language and Politics 13 (1) : 21–50.
Aktürk-Drake, Memet. 2014. The role of perceptual salience in bilingual speakers’ integration of illicit long segments in loanwords. Lingua 143 : 162–186.