29 results on '"Göran Wolf"'
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2. 7. Ulster Scots identity in contemporary Northern Ireland
3. English in the Former German Democratic Republic
4. Studying dialect spelling in its own right
5. Manfred Markus (Universität Innsbruck): 'Sirrah' in Shakespeare’s Plays and beyond: Its Function, Variants and Etymology (from a Corpus-Linguistic Point of View)
6. Holger Kuße (Technische Universität Dresden): Argumente für die Schrift und die Sprache: Bemerkungen zur 'Vita Konstantin-Kyrills' und zu Chrabars 'Über die Buchstaben'
7. Beatrix Weber (Technische Universität Dresden): The Trilingual Register of Legal and Administrative Discourse in Late Medieval England
8. Laura Wright (University of Cambridge): The Hammond Scribe: His Dialect, His Paper, and Folios 133-155 of Trinity College Cambridge MS 0.3.11
9. List of Publications – Ursula Schaefer
10. Katie Long and Rainer Holtei (Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf): Communicative Space in 'The Owl and the Nightingale': The Communication of Wisdom and the Wisdom of Communication
11. Maria Lieber und Gesine Seymer (Technische Universität Dresden): Italienisches im englischen Wortschatz des vor-Elisabethanischen Zeitalters
12. Göran Wolf (Technische Universität Dresden): Þe we stæfcræftere hatan cunnon: Reflections on Ælfric’s Grammatical Terminology
13. Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade (Universiteit Leiden): 'For, alas! there was not affection between us': Letters from Alexander and James Boswell to Abraham Gronovius
14. Christian Mair (Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg): Why the World is Becoming More Monolingual and More Multilingual at the Same Time
15. Haruko Momma (New York University): John Mitchell Kemble and Jacob Grimm: A Cross-national Communication
16. Ulrike Schenk (Berlin): The Dream Scene in Havelok the Dane: An Epitome of Literary Creativity in the Early Middle English Romance Tradition
17. Tom Shippey (Winchester): The Well-Spoken Saint: Speech and Script in the Old English Andreas
18. Karl Maroldt (Berlin): The Phonetic and Phonological Motivation of the 'Great Vowel Shift'
19. Lucia Kornexl (Universität Rostock): 'Ande sey me þis in clerycall manere!' The Elementary Latin Classroom in Late Medieval England as a Communicative Space
20. Claudia Lange (Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen): Text Types, Language Change, and Historical Corpus Linguistics
21. Andrew James Johnston (Freie Universität Berlin): The Exigencies of ‘Latyn Corrupt’: Linguistic Change and Historical Consciousness in Chaucer’s 'Man of Law’s Tale'
22. Christian Prunitsch (Technische Universität Dresden): Zum Prestige des Polnischen im Kommunikationsraum Polen-Litauen des 16. Jahrhunderts
23. Peter Koch (Tübingen) and Wulf Oesterreicher (Munich): Language of Immediacy – Language of Distance: Orality and Literacy from the Perspective of Language Theory and Linguistic History
24. David Trotter (Aberystwyth): 'Saunz desbriser de hay ou de clos': clos(e) in Anglo-French and in English
25. Konrad Ehlich (Berlin/München): Lingua franca – Fakten und Fiktionen
26. Richard Ingham (Birmingham City University): Sense Extension through English-French Language Contact in Medieval England: The Case of as
27. Claudia Aurich (Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster): Varying Proverb Structure and the Communicative Space in Fourteenth and Fifteenth-Century England
28. Hildegard L. C. Tristram (Freiburg) and Christina Bismark (Aberystwyth): On the Demise of Morphological Complexity in English and in the Insular Celtic Languages – A Research Report
29. Heinrich Christoph Albrecht’s Versuch einer critischen Englischen Sprachlehre
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