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List of Publications.


(A = article, R = review, B = book)

1965

A 1 "Two Middle English cautionary lyrics, from a Yale University MS". Anglia 83:172-5.

1966

A 2 "Poem as sacrament: Transcendence of time in the Advent Sequence from the Exter Book". Annuale Mediaevale 7:3-15.

A 3 "Man's heaven: The symbolism of Gawain's shield". Mediaeval Studies 28:354-60.

1967

R 1 Review of H. Aarsleff, The study of language in England, 1780-1860. Victorian Studies 11:115-17.

1969

A 4 "On the derivative status of phonological rules: The function of metarules in sound change". Bloomington Indiana: Indiana University Linguistics Club.

B 1 [Editor] Approaches to English historical linguistics, New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

R 2 [With R. Freidin] Review of R. Jacobs and P.S. Rosenbaum (1968), English transformational grammar. Language Sciences.

1970

A 4 "Palatals and umlaut in Old English". Acta Linguistica Hafniensia 13:75-98.

1971

A 5 "Boundaries as obstruents: Old English voicing assimilation and universal strength hierarchies". Journal of Linguistics The Journal of Linguistics is a peer-reviewed journal in linguistics, and the official publication of the Linguistics Association of Great Britain. It has been published by Cambridge University Press since 1965, and covers all branches of theoretical linguistics.  7:15-30.

1972

A 6 "How intrinsic is content? Markedness, sound change and 'family universals"'. Revue Roumaine de Linguistique 17:416-40.

1973

R 3 Review of P.H. Reaney, The origins of English surnames. Foundations of Language 9:393-402.

A 7 "On the non-universality of natural classes, and how some of them get that way". Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Linguistics Club. [Also in OSCULD 4 (Goteborg).]

A 8 "What kind of vowel was Middle English /a/, and what really happened to it". Work in Progress (Department of Linguistics Noun 1. department of linguistics - the academic department responsible for teaching and research in linguistics
linguistics department

academic department - a division of a school that is responsible for a given subject
, University of Edinburgh (body, education) University of Edinburgh - A university in the centre of Scotland's capital. The University of Edinburgh has been promoting and setting standards in education for over 400 years. ) 3:10-18.

A 9 "A case for making phonological rules state things that don't happen". Edinburgh Working Papers in Linguistics 3:20-28.

1974

A 10 "Strategic design as the motivation for a sound shift: The rationale of Grimm's Law". Acta Linguistica Hafniensia 15:51-66.

A 11 "Linguistic orthogenesis or·tho·gen·e·sis  
n.
1. Biology The theory that the evolution of a species is influenced most strongly by internal factors and is not subject to the external forces of natural selection.

2.
? Scots vowel quantity and the English length conspiracy." In: J.M. Anderson and C. Jones (eds.) Historical linguistics: Proceedings of the First International Conference on Historical Linguistics, Edinburgh, 3-7 September 1973, vol. two. Amsterdam: North-Holland, 311-52.

1975

B 2 [with J.M. Anderson] Old English phonology The phonology of Old English is necessarily somewhat speculative, since it is preserved purely as a written language. Nevertheless, there is a very large corpus of Old English, and the written language apparently indicates phonological alternations quite faithfully, so it is not . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press (known colloquially as CUP) is a publisher given a Royal Charter by Henry VIII in 1534, and one of the two privileged presses (the other being Oxford University Press). .

A 12 "How intrinsic is content? Markedness, sound change and 'family universals"'. [Revised and expanded version of Lass 1972]. In: D.L. Goyvaerts and G. Pullum (eds.), Essays on the sound pattern of English. Ghent: E. Story-Scientia, 475-504.

1976

B 3 English phonology and phonological theory: Synchronic syn·chron·ic  
adj.
1. Synchronous.

2. Of or relating to the study of phenomena, such as linguistic features, or of events of a particular time, without reference to their historical context.
 and diachronic di·a·chron·ic
adj.
Of or concerned with phenomena as they change through time.
 studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

A 13 "Variation studies and historical linguistics". Language in Society 5:219-29.

R 4 Review of W.U. Dressler and F.V. Mares (eds.) Phonologica 1972. Journal of Linguistics 12:346-57.

A 14 "Summary and comments on DEMEP [Dictionary of Early Modern English Early Modern English refers to the stage of the English language used from about the end of the Middle English period (the latter half of the 15th century) to 1650. Thus, the first edition of the King James Bible and the works of William Shakespeare both belong to the late phase  Pronunciation]". DEMEP. English pronunciation 1500-1800. Report based on the DEMEP Symposium, October 1974. Stockholm: Almqvist and Wiksell, 79-87.

A 15 "On generative taxonomy, and whether formalism 'explains"'. Studia Linguistica 30:139-54.

R 5 Review of K-H. Dahlstedt (1975), The Nordic languages and modern linguistics, 2. Studia Linguistica 30:183-96.

1977

R 6 Review of M.B. Emeneau, Ritual structure and language structure of the Todas. JAOS JAOS Journal of the American Oriental Society
JAOS Japan Offroad Service (Tokyo, Japan)
JAOS Japan Amateurs Orchid Society
 97:251-3.

A 16 "Internal reconstruction and generative phonology phonology, study of the sound systems of languages. It is distinguished from phonetics, which is the study of the production, perception, and physical properties of speech sounds; phonology attempts to account for how they are combined, organized, and convey meaning ". Transactions of the Philological Society 1975:1-26.

A 17 "'Centres of gravity' in language evaluation". Die Sprache 23:11-19.

1978

A 18 "On the phonetic specification of Old English /r/". Studia Anglica Posnaniensia 9:3-16.

A 19 "Mapping constraints in phonological reconstruction: On climbing down trees without falling out of them". In: J. Fisiak (ed.), Recent developments in historical phonology. The Hague: Mouton mouton

lamb pelt made to resemble seal or beaver.
, 245-86.

R 6 Review of T. Bynon. Historical linguistics (1977). Belfast Working Papers in Language and Linguistics 3:115-26.

1979

B 4 Translation of D. Wunderlich, Foundations of linguistics. [Original: Grundlagen der Linguistik, Rowohlt, 1974]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

1980

B 5 On explaining language change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

A 20 "Paradigm coherence and the conditioning of change: Yiddish 'schwadeletion' again". In: J. Fisiak (ed.), Historical morphology. The Hague: Mouton, 25 1-72.

1981

A 21"Undigested history and synchronic 'structure"'. In: D. Goyvaerts (ed.), Phonology in the 1980s. Ghent: E. Story-Scientia, 535-44.

A 22 "Some possible weaknesses of 'strong naturalness"'. In: T. Thrane et al. (eds.), Typology and genetics of language, (Travaux du Cercie Linguistique do Copenhague), 20:93-102.

A 23 "John Hart vindicatus? A study in the interpretation of early phoneticians". Folia fo·li·a  
n.
Plural of folium.
 Linguistica Historica 1:75-96.

A 24 "Explaining sound change: The future of an illusion". In: W.U. Dressler et al. (eds.), Phonologica 1980: Akten der vierten Internationalen Phonologie-Tagung, Wien, 29 Juni-2 Juli 1980. Innsbruck: Innsbrucker Beitrage z. Sprachwissenschaft, 257-73.

1982

A 25 "The scientific status of theories of language change: A prologue and some reflections". University of Essex The University of Essex is a British plate glass university. It received its Royal Charter in 1965. The university's main campus is located at Wivenhoe Park on the outskirts of Colchester (the oldest recorded town in Britain) in the English county of Essex, less than a mile from , Cognitive Studies Centre, SCSM SCSM Specific Communication Service Mapping
SCSM Senior Certified Shopping Center Manager
SCSM Seattle Commission for Sexual Minorities
SCSM Standard Communications-Computer Systems Manager
SCSM South Charleston Stamping and Machine
 7:1-32.

1983

A 26 "Velar ve·lar
adj.
1. Of or relating to a velum.

2. Concerning or using the soft palate.
 /r/ and the history of English". In: M. Devenport, E. Hansen and H.F. Nielsen (eds.), Current topics in English historical linguistics. Odense: Odense University Press, 67-94.

A 27 "Quantity, resolution, and syllable geometry". Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics 10:33-66.

1984

A 28 "Quantity, resolution, and syllable geometry". [Revised version of 1983a]. Folia Linguistica Historica 4:151-80.

B 6 Phonology: An introduction to basic concepts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

A 29 "Reflections on rule loss". In: N.F. Blake and C. Jones (eds.), English historical linguistics: Studies in development. (CECTAL Conference Papers series 3.) Sheffield: Department of English Noun 1. department of English - the academic department responsible for teaching English and American literature
English department

academic department - a division of a school that is responsible for a given subject
 Language, University of Sheffield The University of Sheffield is a research university, located in Sheffield in South Yorkshire, England. Reputation
Sheffield was the Sunday Times University of the Year in 2001 and has consistently appeared as their top 20 institutions.
, 279-96.

A 30 "Survival, convergence, innovation: A problem in diachronic theory". Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics 12.

A 31 [with J.A.W. Eggs] "Phonetics phonetics (fōnĕt`ĭks, fə–), study of the sounds of languages from three basic points of view. Phonetics studies speech sounds according to their production in the vocal organs (articulatory phonetics), their physical properties  and language history: American /r/ as a candidate for an archaism ar·cha·ism  
n.
1. An archaic word, phrase, idiom, or other expression.

2. An archaic style, quality, or usage.



[New Latin archaeismus, from Greek arkhaismos, from
". In: J.A.W. Higgs and R Thelwall (eds.), Topics in linguistic phonetics in honour of E.T. Uldall. (Occasional Papers in Linguistics and Language Learning 9) 9 1-110.

R 7 Review of C. Christie, Unformitarianism in linguistics (1983). Journal of Linguistics 20:409-12.

A 32 "Language and time: A historian's view". [University of Cape Town Coordinates:
“UCT” redirects here. For other uses, see UCT (disambiguation).
 inaugural lecture.] Cape Town: University of Cape Town.

A 33 "Vowel system universals and typology: Prologue to theory". Phonology Yearbook 1:75-112.

1985

A 34 [with S. Wright] "The South African chain shift: Order out of chaos?" In: R Eaton et al. (eds.), Papers from the 4th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics, 137-62.

A 35 "Minkova noch einmal: MEOSL and the resolved foot". Folia Linguistica Historica 6:245-66.

1986

A 36 "Words without etyma et·y·ma  
n.
A plural of etymon.
: Germanic 'tooth"'. In: D. Kastovsky and A. Szwedek (eds.), Linguistics across historical and geographical boundaries. In honour of Jacek Fisiak on the occasion of his fiftieth birthday. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 473-82.

R 8 Review of I. Maddieson, Patterns of sounds (1984). Journal of Linguistics 22:220-4.

A 37 "'Irish influence': Reflections on 'standard' English and its opposites, and the identification of calques". Studia Anglica Posnaniensia 18:1-7.

A 38 "Conventionalism, invention and historical 'reality': Some reflections on method". Diachronica 3,1:15-42.

R 9 Review of A.O Sandred, Introduction to Chaucerian English (1985). Neuphilologishe Mitteilungen 87:599-602.

A 39 "Intradiphthongal dependencies". In: J.M. Anderson and J. Durand (eds.), Explorations in dependency phonology. Amsterdam: Foris 109-31.

A 40 "On Schwa schwa  
n.
1. A mid-central neutral vowel, typically occurring in unstressed syllables, as the final vowel of English sofa.

2. The symbol (
". Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics 15:1-30.

A 41 [with S. Wright] "Endogeny vs. contact: 'Afrikaans influence' on South African English South African English is a dialect of English spoken in South Africa and in neighbouring countries with a large number of Anglo-Africans living in them, such as Botswana, Namibia, and Zimbabwe. ." English World-Wide 7:201-24.

1987

B 7 The shape of English. Structure and history. London: J.M. Dent.

A 42 "Language, speakers, history and drift". In: W. Koopman et al. (eds.), Explanation and linguistic change. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 151-76.

A 43 "On sh*tting the door in Early Modern English: A reply to Professor Samuels". In: Koopman et al 251-6.

A 44 "How reliable is Goldswain? On the credibility of an early South African English source". African Studies 42, 2:155-62.

1988

A 45 "The 'Akzentumsprung' of Old English eo". In: C. Duncan-Rose and T. Venemann (eds.) On Language. Rhetorica, Phonologica, Syntactica: A Festschrift fest·schrift  
n. pl. fest·schrif·ten or fest·schrifts
A volume of learned articles or essays by colleagues and admirers, serving as a tribute or memorial especially to a scholar.
 for Robert P. Stockwell from his friends and colleagues. London: Routledge, 121-32.

A 46 "Vowel shifts, great and otherwise: Remarks on Stockwell and Minkova". In: D. Kastovsky and G. Bauer (eds.), Luick revisited. Papers read at the Luick-Symposium at Schlo[beta] Liechtenstein, 15.18.9.1985. Tubingen: Gunter Narr Verlag, 395-410.

A 47 "Cynewulf revisited: The problem of the runic (jargon) runic - Obscure, consisting of runes.

VMS fans sometimes refer to Unix as "RUnix". Unix fans return the compliment by expanding VMS to "Very Messy Syntax" or "Vachement Mauvais Systeme" (French; literally "Cowlike Bad System", idiomatically "Bitchy Bad System").
 signatures". In: G. Nixon and J. Honey (eds.), An historic tongue: Studies in English linguistics in memory of Barbara Strang. London: Routledge, 17-30.

R 10 Review of A.G. Ramat et al., Papers from the 7th International Conference on Historical Linguistics (1987). Diachronica 5,1/2:239-46.

1989

A 48 "How early does English get modern? Or, what happens if you listen to orthoepists and not to historians". Diachronica 6,1:75-110.

1990

A 49 "Early Mainland residues in Southern Hiberno-English". Irish University Review 20,1:137-49.

A 50 "How to do things with junk: Exaptation ex·ap·ta·tion  
n. Biology
The utilization of a structure or feature for a function other than that for which it was developed through natural selection.



[ex- + (ad)aptation.
 in language evolution". Journal of Linguistics 26:79-102.

A 51 "Where do extraterritorial Englishes come from? Dialect input and re-codification in transported Englishes". In: S. Adamson, V. Law, N. Vincent and S. Wright (eds.), Papers from the 5th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 245-80.

A 51 "A 'standard' South African vowel system". In: S. Ramsaran (ed.), Studies in the pronunciation of English. A commemorative volume in honour of A.C. Gimson. London: Routledge, 272-85.

1991

A 52 "Of data and 'datives': Ruthwell Cross rodi again". Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 92:395-403.

1992

A 53 "System-shape and the eternal return: Front rounded vowels in English". Folia Linguistica Historica 10:163-98.

A 54 "The Early Modern English vowels noch einmal, again: A reply to Minkova and Stockwell". Diachronica 9,1:1-14.

A 55 "Front rounded vowels in Old English". In: F. Colman (ed..), Evidence for Old English: Material and theoretical bases for reconstruction (=Edinburgh Studies in the English Language 2). Edinburgh: John Donald, 88-116.

A 56 "The transcription of Afrikaans: Towards an improved "standard" notation". In: D.F. Gowlett (ed.), African linguistic contributions. Presented in honour of Ernst Westphal. Pretoria: Via Afrika Limited, 260-71.

A 57 "Phonology and morphology". In: N.F. Blake (ed.), The Cambridge History of the English Language English is a West Germanic language that originated from the Anglo-Frisian dialects brought to Britain by Germanic settlers and Roman auxiliary troops from various parts of what is now northwest Germany and the Northern Netherlands. , vol. II, 1066-1476. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 23-155.

A 58 "What, if anything, was the Great Vowel Shift Great Vowel Shift
n.
A series of phonetic changes occurring in Early Modern English in which the Middle English low and mid long vowels were raised, (ä) and (
?" In: M. Rissanen, O. Ihalainen, T. Nevalainen and I. Taavitsainen (eds.), History of Englishes: New methods and interpretations in historical linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 144-55.

1991-3

A 59 "Old English fricative fricative (frik´tiv),
n a speech sound made by forcing the airstream through such a narrow opening that audible high-frequency air
 voicing unvisited". Studia Anglica Posnaniensia 25-27:3-46.

A 60 "How real(ist) are reconstructions?" In: C. Jones (ed.), Historical linguistics: problems and perspectives. London: Longman, 156-89.

A 61 "What are language histories histories of?" In: H-H. Lieb (ed.), Prospects for a new structuralism. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 243-72.

A 62 "Old English -ian: Inflectional or derivatiolan?" Vienna English Working Papers 2,1:26-34.

A 63 "Old English class II. More VIEWS". Vienna English Working Papers 2,2:104-111.

1994

B 8 Old English: A historical linguistic companion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

A 64 "Proliferation and option-cutting: The strong verb in the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries." In: D. Stein and I. Tieken-Boon van Ostade (eds.), Towards a standard English 1600-1800. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 81-114.

A 65 "Afrikaans mid-vowel diphthongization diph·thong·ize  
tr. & intr.v. diph·thong·ized, diph·thong·iz·ing, diph·thong·iz·es
To pronounce as or become a diphthong.



diph
: Inheritance or convergence?" In: G. Oliver and A. Coetzee (eds.), Nuwe perspektiewe op die geskiednis van Afrikaans opgedra aan Edith H. Raidt. Halfweghuis: Southern Boekuitgewers, 70-83.

A 66 "Interpreting vs. disappearing: On texts as historical objects". SELIM (Revista de la Sociedad Espanola de Lengua y Literatura Inglesia Medieval), 1994.

A 67 "On 'root based' Indo-European: An embryological or phylogenetic note". Vienna English Working Papers 3,1:31-35.

1995

A 68 "South African English". In: R Mesthrie (ed.), A reader in South African sociolinguistics sociolinguistics, the study of language as it affects and is affected by social relations. Sociolinguistics encompasses a broad range of concerns, including bilingualism, pidgin and creole languages, and other ways that language use is influenced by contact among . Cape Town: David Philip.

R 11 Review of Fran Colman (1992) Money Talks: Reconstructing Old English. Word 46:94-8.

A 68 "Four letters in search of an etymology". Diachronica 12:91-112.

R 12 Review of B. Naumann et al. (eds.), Language and earth. Elective affinities between the emerging sciences of linguistics and geology. Word 46,3:396-99.

1996

R 13 Review of A. Dauses, Prognosen sprachlichen Wandels. Moglichkeiten und Grenzen der erklarenden Philologie. Word 47:128-31.

A 69 "Glottal stop and linking [h] in South African English. With a note on two antique connections". In: J. Klemola, M. Kyto and M. Rissanen (eds.), Speech past and present. Studies in English dialectology di·a·lec·tol·o·gy  
n.
The study of dialects.



dia·lec
 in memory of Ossi Ihalainen. (Bamberger Beitrage zur Englischen Sprachwissenschaft, 38.) Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 130-51.

A 70 "Historical linguistics". In: A. Kuper and J. Kuper (eds.), The social science encyclopedia, 2nd ed. London: Routledge, 365-6.
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Publication:Studia Anglica Posnaniensia: international review of English Studies
Article Type:Bibliography
Date:Jan 1, 1997
Words:2075
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