Show
Sort by
-
- Journal Article
- A2
- open access
The travels of John Betjeman's literary voice in 'the arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel': from the 1890s to the 1920s, and back again
-
I guess, I suppose and I believe as pragmatic markers: grammaticalization and functions
-
The social symbolic of centre and periphery. A linguistic ethnographic analysis of the distribution of power in the seating arrangement of a British embassy staff meeting
-
Explicit you-subjects in English imperatives: a corpus-based analysis
-
Voice representations in Dutch Learner English: evidence from aspiration and assimilation
-
'The Critic as Acrobat': Walking the Tightrope between Cultural Studies between Cultural History
-
Beyond: New Perspectives in Linguistics
-
Exploring regressive voice assimilation in English and Dutch in the framework of Optimality Theory
-
Tied to the handle of a shopping cart: the representation of Manhattan's Spatiality in 'blank fiction' novels
-
Gender performativity in Woolf's Orlando
-
Aspects of the use of WANT TO in informal British English: the private character of Volition in various guises
-
The expression of volition in political interviews reconsidered
-
Is claim a believe-type verb? Further proof of the pudding
-
Response to 'Henry James's Hawthorne
-
- Journal Article
- A2
- open access
Power in Petticoats: Augusta Webster's poetry, political pamphlets, and poetry reviews
-
Amoroso ma non troppo: the music of the 'sirens' chapter in Joyce's Ulysses
-
Late Seventeenth-Century Satires on Women