Part of a 'Journal of English Linguistics' Special Issue 'Complicating Corpus Methods in Historical English Language Studies' 2026. Introduction by Colette Moore & Chris C. Palmer: https://t.co/egIqlk49F0
New article: Marcus, I and Maden-Weinberger, U. 2026. 'Coordinating and Subordinating Conjunctions in Five Genres Across the History of Englishdf': https://t.co/h44ix9n0iW
Upcoming EHU Linguistics Research Group webinar: Thurs 26th March, 2-3pm (online via Teams). 'Media Representations of Blindness in UK Newspapers: A Corpus-Based Study' - Dr Costas Gabrielatos, Dr Valeria Occelli (EHU). Abstract and registeration link: https://t.co/lohPk9Hq52
Upcoming EHU Linguistics Research Group talk - 🗓️ 26 Feb '26, 2pm (via Teams): 'Death by dictionary: investigating the link between surname death and lexical association' - Dr Harry Parkin, Univ of Chester. Abstract and registration: https://t.co/mkBRbzxOjR.
Time amendment for upcoming EHU Linguistics Research Group talk: - 🗓️ 27 Jan '26, now at 4:15pm (via Teams): 'Sound transfer: the production of stops by bilingual speakers' Dr Niamh Kelly, Newcastle Univ. Abstract and registration: https://t.co/mkBRbzxOjR
Upcoming talk - 🗓️ 27 Jan '26, 2pm (via Teams): 'Sound transfer: the production of stops by bilingual speakers' Dr Niamh Kelly, Newcastle Univ. Abstract and registration: https://t.co/jJ8ixHjEHa
Part of the EHU Linguistics Research Group Speaker Series. Hope to see you there!
Coming up 🗓️ 27 Nov, 2pm (via Teams):
'About ‘aboutness’ in the opening and closing statements of State of Minnesota v. Derek Michael Chauvin (2021)'
Natalie Jones, Univ of Leeds
Info and registration: https://t.co/mkBRbzxOjR
Part of EHU Linguistics Research Group Speaker Series
Very excited to be a part of EHU's 2024 seminar series! Looking forward to some fantastic sessions as well as talking all things @Hamilton_Papers with @SMCoulombeau on 29 Feb 🙂
Next talk (via Teams) in the Edge Hill Linguistics Research Seminar Series: 22nd Feb at 3pm, Dr Beth Mallory (UCL): 'A lexicon of relics: Tracing the diachronic evolution of diagnostic terminology in obstetrics and gynaecology'. To register:
https://t.co/wyXakpYLTl
The Mary Hamilton Papers online edition is now officially complete! 3201 items, half of them transcribed, including all her diaries. Do take a look at the edition (https://t.co/eWRZH7pbcK) and project website (https://t.co/LuvI9yDuyr).
Anyone who is interested in studying for a PhD in the department of English & Creative Arts @edgehill, please take a look at this funding opportunity - deadline in January:
https://t.co/mKrABvr3Nr #Englishcreates@UnivEnglish@English_EHU
Next meeting of the EHU Linguistics Research Seminar Series: Weds 6th Dec, 4:30 pm – online. Prof. Louise Sylvester (University of Westminster, UK): 'Semantic integration of loanwords borrowed in the Middle English period'. All welcome! To register: https://t.co/0Vm5hKeTZx
Published this week, and arriving at my house this moment, is this beauty. I hope you’ll agree that, like the cover picture, this book reveals a Nan Shepherd we’ve not known before. Delighted with the classy cover and production courtesy of @EdinburghUP
Roll up, roll up! Edge Hill Linguistics Research Group meeting: Weds 15 November, 4:30 pm (GMT) – online (MS Teams).
Dr Sara Pons-Sanz (University of Cardiff, UK): 'An exploration of Orrm's Norse-Derived Vocabulary'.
More info & registration link: https://t.co/aYy1idK1RK
New open access article with Dr Alpo Honkapohja:
The long history of shortening: a diachronic analysis of abbreviation practices from the fifteenth to the twenty-first century
https://t.co/hoxX1vKZo1
We are very sad to pass along news of the passing of Johanna Green. Many here will know her as @Codicologist and she was a leading scholar of bringing together medieval manuscripts and digital humanities https://t.co/ft20yL9cib
Johanna Green, July 21st 1983-July 20th 2023.
It is with heavy hearts we mourn the loss of an exceptional teacher, scholar, and friend. Johanna's legacy will forever live on in the hearts of those she touched.
Latest publication: A comparative investigation of anaphoric reference devices in Anglo Norman and Middle English personal letters. Open access: https://t.co/XEAkRGClUw #anglonorman#middleenglish#medievalletters