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The Handbook of English Linguistics
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Table of Contents

Notes on Contributors.1. Introduction (Bas Aarts, University College London and April McMahon, University of Edinburgh)..Part I: Methodology.2. Description and Theory (Kresti Borjars, University of Manchester).3. English Corpus Linguistics (Tony McEnergy, Lancaster University and Costas Gabrielatos, Lancaster University).4. English Grammar Writing (Andrew Linn, University of Sheffield).5. Data Collection (Charles F. Meyer, University of Massachusetts, Boston and Gerald Nelson, University College London)..Part II: Syntax.6. English World Classes and Phrases (Bas Aarts, University College London and Liliane Haegeman, University of Lille III).7. Verbs and Their Satellites (David Allerton, University of Basle, Switzerland).8. Clause Types (Peter Collins, University of New South Wales).9. Coordination and Subordination (Rodney Huddleston, University of Queensland and Geoffrey K. Pullum, University of California, Santa Cruz).10. Tense in English (Laura A. Michaelis, University of Colorado, Boulder).11. Aspect and Aspectuality (Robert I. Binnick, University of Toronto).12. Mood and Modality in English (Ilse Depraetere, University of Lille III and Susan Reed, Katholieke Univeriteit Leuven).13. Information Structure (Betty J. Birner, Northern Illinois University and Gregory Ward, Northwestern University).14. Current Changes in English Syntax (Christian Mair, University of Freiburg and Geoffrey Leech, Lancaster University).15. English Constructions (Adele E. Goldberg, Princeton University and Devin Casenhiser, Princeton University)..Part III: Phonetics and Phonology.16. English Phonetics (Michael K.C. MacMahon, University of Glasgow).17. English Phonology and Morphology (Ricardo Bermudez-Otero, University of Newcastle upon Tyne and April McMahon, University of Edinburgh).18. Prosodic Phonology (Michael Hammond, University of Arizona).19. Intonation (Francis Nolan, University of Cambridge)..Part IV: Lexis and Morphology.20. English Words (Donka Imnkova, UCLA and Robert Stockwell, UCLA).21. Compounds and Minor Word-formation Types (Laurie Bauer, Victoria University of Wellington).22. English Inflection and Derivation (James P. Blevins , University of Cambridge).23. Productivity (Ingo Plag, University of Siegen, Germany).24. Lexical Semantics (Kate Kearns, Canterbury University).25. Lexicography (Julie Coleman, University of Leicester)..Part V: Variation, Discourse, Stylistics, and Usage.26. Syntactic Variation in English: A Global Perspective (Bernd Kortmann, University of Freiburg, Germany).27. Phonological Variation: A Global Perspective (Paul Foulkes, University of York).28. Spoken and Written English (Jim Miller, University of Auckland).29. The Grammar of Conversation (Paulo Quaglio, University of Central Florida and Douglas Biber, Northern Arizona University).30. Gender and the English Language (Deborah Cameron, Oxford University).31. Language and Literature: Stylistics (Peter Stockwell, University of Nottingham).32. English Usage: Prescription and Description (Pam Peters, Macquarie University)..Subject and Key Name Index

About the Author

Bas Aarts is Professor of English Linguistics and Director of the Survey of English Usage at University College London. His publications include Small Clauses in English: The Nonverbal Types (1992), The Verb in Contemporary English (edited with Charles F. Meyer, 1995), English Syntax and Argumentation (1997/2001), Investigating Natural Language: Working with the British Component of the International Corpus of English (with Gerald Nelson and Sean Wallis, 2002), and Fuzzy Grammar: A Reader (edited with David Denison, Evelien Keizer, and Gergana Popova, 2004). With David Denison and Richard Hogg, he edits the journal English Language and Linguistics. April McMahon is Forbes Professor of English Language at the University of Edinburgh. Her publications include Understanding Language Change (1994), Lexical Phonology and the History of English (2000), Change, Chance, and Optimality (2000), An Introduction to English Phonology (2002), and Language Classification by Numbers (with Robert McMahon, 2005).

Reviews

"The handbook is cohesive in its consistent depth of attention to variation, description, and history ... a comprehensive picture of today's English ... Recommended. Upper division undergraduates through faculty and professionals." "CHOICE" "This addition to the admirable series of Blackwell Handbooks contains thirty-one articles of about twenty to twenty-five pages by a distinguished set of contributors ... [It] functions as a showcase for English linguistics, and as a map of the territory." "Linguistics""Just what the English Language needs at the start of the twenty-first century: an authoritative guide to the literature, balancing solid scholarship with openness, clarity, wisdom, and breadth - pronunciation, education, linguistic theory, and much else. Highly recommended!" "Richard Hudson, University College London""Bas Aarts and April McMahon have assembled a star-studded cast of linguistic experts who have produced a state-of-the art compendium on all the maj

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