págs. 7-12
From mōd to emotion (or almost): the medieval gestation of a modern concept
págs. 13-39
Middle English word-formation: a list of desiderata
págs. 41-56
págs. 57-72
owards an electronic LALME: Scandinavian and French influence in some late Middle English texts from Cheshire
págs. 73-84
Middle English Lexical Distributions: two Instances From The Lay Folks’ Catechism
págs. 85-100
A pragma-linguistic approach to medieval narrative: the case of saints’ lives
págs. 101-115
From Old Northumbrian to Northern Middle English: bridging the divide
págs. 117-132
págs. 133-143
From denominal to deverbal: the suffix -age in Middle English
págs. 145-164
Frequency effects: Middle English nis as a case in point
págs. 165-178
págs. 179-189
He nas nat right fat: on the origin and development of intensifier right
págs. 191-207
págs. 209-226
págs. 227-237
Himself: an overview of its use in Middle English
págs. 239-256
págs. 257-268
págs. 269-287
© 2001-2025 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados