Publications
Diskin, Chloé and Stephen Levey. 2019. Going global and sounding local. Quotative variation and change in L1 and L2 speakers of Irish (Dublin) English. English World-Wide 40 (1) : 53–78.
Feiz, Parastou. 2019. Beyond motion: ‘Come’ and ‘go’ in Persian oral narratives. Linguistics 57 (3) : 577–606.
Loureiro-Porto, Lucía. 2019. Grammaticalization of semi-modals of necessity in Asian Englishes. English World-Wide 40 (2) : 115–143.
Szeto, Pui Yiu, Stephen Matthews and Virginia Yip. 2019. Bilingual children as “laboratories” for studying contact outcomes: Development of perfective aspect. Linguistics 57 (3) : 693–724.
Bernander, Rasmus. 2018. The grammaticalization of -kotok- into a negative marker in Manda (Bantu N.11). Linguistics 56 (3) : 653–680.
Bogomolova, Natalia. 2018. The rise of person agreement in East Lezgic: Assessing the role of frequency. Linguistics 56 (4) : 819–844.
Chor, Winnie Oi-Wan, ed. 2018. Directional Particles in Cantonese. Form, function, and grammaticalization. (Studies in Chinese Language and Discourse 9). John Benjamins.
Detges, Ulrich. 2018. Strong pronouns in modern spoken French: Cliticization, constructionalization, grammaticalization? Linguistics 56 (5) : 1059–1098.
Kolyaseva, Alena F. 2018. The ‘new’ Russian quotative tipa: Pragmatic scope and functions. Journal of Pragmatics 128 : 82–97.
Li, Wenchao. 2018. Multi-verb constructions in Old Chinese and Middle Chinese. From verb serialising to verb compounding. Asia-Pacific Language Variation 4 (1) : 103–133.
Robert, Stéphane. 2018. The challenge of polygrammaticalization for linguistic theory. Fractal grammar and transcategorial functioning. Cognitive Linguistic Studies 5 (1) : 106–132.
Schnell, Stefan. 2018. Whence subject-verb agreement? Investigating the role of topicality, accessibility, and frequency in Vera’a texts. Linguistics 56 (4) : 735–780.
Streeck, Jürgen. 2018. Grammaticalization and Bodily Action: Do They Go Together? Research on Language and Social Interaction 51 (1) : 26–32.
Streeck, Jürgen. 2018. Grammaticalization and Bodily Action: Do They Go Together? Research on Language & Social Interaction 51 (1) : 26–32.