140 results on '"Kopaczyk, Joanna"'
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2. The Challenges of Bringing Together Multilingualism and Multimodality
3. How the Spruce Ageing Process Affects Wood.
4. The language of medieval legal record as a complex multilingual code
5. 17. Textual standardisation of legal Scots vis a vis Latin
6. 10 Unstable content, remediated layout: Urban laws in Scotland through manuscript and print
7. Historical (Im)politeness
8. The impact of resin harvest history on properties of Scots pine wood tissue
9. Early Spelling Evidence for Scots L-vocalisation: A Corpus-based Approach
10. Historical Dialectology and the Angus McIntosh Legacy
11. Historical Dialectology in the Digital Age
12. 1 Historical Dialectology and the Angus McIntosh Legacy
13. 4 Early Spelling Evidence for Scots L-vocalisation: A Corpus-based Approach
14. A grapho-phonologically parsed corpus of medieval Scots: variation across time
15. Medieval Multilingualism in Poland: Creating a Corpus of Greater Poland Court Oaths (Rotha)
16. A grapho-phonologically parsed corpus of medieval Scots:Variation across time
17. Chapter 1. Present applications and future directions in pattern-driven approaches to corpus linguistics
18. Chapter 11. Blogging around the world
19. 13. Administrative multilingualism on the page in early modern Poland: In search of a framework for written code-switching
20. Diachronic Corpus Pragmatics: Irma Taavitsainen, Andreas H. Jucker and Jukka Tuominen (Eds.), John Benjamins, Amsterdam, 2014, 335 pp., ISBN: 9789027256485 (hardbound), EUR 95.00
21. How Wood Quality Can Be Shaped: Results of 70 Years of Experience
22. Terms and conditions
23. Defining and Exploring Binomials
24. Long Lexical Bundles and Standardisation in Historical Legal Texts
25. BIOSOCIAL DIVERSITY OF SCOTS PINE (PINUS SYLVESTRIS L.) IN A TREE STAND IN RELATION TO CHOSEN HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY INDICATORS OF THE STEM
26. Historical Dialectology in the Digital Age
27. Visualising pre-standard spelling practice:Understanding the interchange of ‹ch(t)› and ‹th(t)› in Older Scots
28. Summary and Conclusions
29. Long Bundles
30. The Language of Legal Texts
31. Introduction: Scots as the Language of the Law
32. Burghs in Scottish History
33. Binomials and Multinomials in Early Legal Scots
34. Repetition, Fixedness, and Lexical Bundles
35. EdHeW Corpus Material and Lexical Bundles
36. The Grammar of Lexical Bundles in Early Legal Scots
37. Living in a Burgh
38. Law and the Burgh
39. General Conclusions
40. Exploring Language of the Past
41. Short Bundles
42. Communities of practice as a locus of language change
43. Formulaic discourse across Early Modern English medical genres
44. How a community of practice creates a text community
45. Visualising pre-standard spelling practice: Understanding the interchange of ‹ch(t)› and ‹th(t)› in Older Scots
46. The variability of terpenes in conifers under developmental and environmental stimuli
47. Repetitive and therefore fixed?
48. Standaryzacja tekstu w perspektywie historycznej. Analiza zbitek leksykalnych
49. The Scots -- Northern English continuum of marking noun plurality
50. Multilingualism in Greater Poland court records (1386–1448): tagging discourse boundaries and code-switching
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