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This page lists all time most cited articles for this title. Please use the publication date filters on the left if you would like to restrict this list to recently published content, for example to articles published in the last three years. The number of times each article was cited is displayed to the right of its title and can be clicked to access a list of all titles this article has been cited by.
- Cited by 3
Old English <cg> and its sound correspondences in Old English and Middle English
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 07 August 2019, pp. 687-718
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- Cited by 3
The <quh->–<wh-> switch: an empirical account of the anglicisation of a Scots variant in Scotland during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 30 April 2019, pp. 211-236
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The rise of the to-infinitive as verb complement1
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- 12 September 2008, pp. 1-36
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A multifactorial analysis of contact-induced change in speech reporting in written White South African English (WSAfE)
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 29 April 2019, pp. 179-209
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Special issue on support strategies in language variation and change
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- 25 October 2016, pp. 383-393
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The aggregate and the individual: thoughts on what non-alternating authors reveal about linguistic alternations – a response to Petré
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- 07 July 2017, pp. 251-262
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I was sat there talking all night: a corpus-based study on factors governing intra-dialectal variation in British English1
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- 25 October 2016, pp. 511-531
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Verbo-nominal constructions of necessity with þearf n. and need n.: competition and grammaticalization from OE to eModE1
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- 01 October 2010, pp. 373-397
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Narrative when in English1
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- 24 May 2016, pp. 273-294
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Is vowel nasalisation phonological in English? A systematic review
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- 02 October 2017, pp. 405-437
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Yorkshire folk versus Yorkshire boors: evidence for sociological fractionation in nineteenth-century Yorkshire dialect writing
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- 04 August 2023, pp. 469-489
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Special issue on mechanisms of French contact influence in Middle English: diffusion and maintenance
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- 04 July 2018, pp. 197-205
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The trap–bath split in Bristol English
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- 26 April 2019, pp. 269-306
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- Cited by 2
Well-formed lists: specificational copular sentences as predicative inversion constructions1
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- 01 December 2016, pp. 77-99
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Genitive coordinations with personal pronouns1
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 June 2011, pp. 363-385
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Form does not follow function, but variation does: the origin and early usage of possessive havegot in English
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- 25 October 2016, pp. 487-510
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OV–VO in English and the role of case marking in word order
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- 06 May 2005, pp. 63-82
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Have went – an American usage problem1
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- 01 July 2015, pp. 293-312
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Dialect levelling and Cockney diphthong shift reversal in South East England: the case of the Debden Estate
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- 12 May 2022, pp. 621-643
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L. Brinton, Pragmatic markers in English: grammaticalization and discourse functions. Topics in English Linguistics 19. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1996. Pp. xvi + 412. Cloth DM 168, ISBN 3 11 014872 2.
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- 12 September 2008, pp. 150-154
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