Karen Corrigan (Newcastle University) & Laura Rupp (Vriej Universiteit Amsterdam)
Carolina P. Amador-Moreno, Karen P. Corrigan & Mary Robinson
Tracking obsolescence and persistence: Inversion in embedded questions in Irish English and beyond
Claire Childs
Obsolescence in non-standard subject-verb agreement in England: A dialectological perspective
Beth Cole, Karen P. Corrigan & Laura Rupp
“There’s a one for sale in Northumberland”: Exploring the obsolescence of an indefinite marker in North-East England
E. Jamieson
Morphosyntactic obsolescence across the Shetland Islands
Warren Maguire
Phonological variation and change in the MEAT and FOOT lexical sets in Northern Irish English
Sali A. Tagliamonte
Obsolescence in Ontario: A 20th century watershed in Canada
Yolanda Fernández-Pena (Universidade de Vigo) & Javier Pérez-Guerra (Universidade de Vigo)
Yolanda Fernández-Pena & Javier Pérez-Guerra
Subject-verb number agreement in flux: Structural complexity, proximity and linguistic regularisation in English varieties
David Hernández-Coalla
Agreement at the crossroads of syntax and complexity: A quantitative account of hybrid verbal agreement with collective nouns
Alexander Lakaw & Mikko Laitinen
“Liverpool were superior tonight”: Variation and change of verbal agreement patterns in L2 idiolects
Karolina Rudnicka
Non-verbal plural number agreement in English: A multi-perspective approach
Elizaveta Smirnova
Do native authors agree more than non-native professional writers?
Sofia Rüdiger (Freie Universität Berlin) & Jakob Leimgruber (Universität Regensburg)
Ariane Macalinga Borlongan, Danica Salazar & Zen Sato
Words of Japanese origin in the Oxford English Dictionary across the history of Japanese English
Kristine de Leon & Edward Jay M. Quinto
Explorations on the emerging variety of English in Oman
Fransisca Kristanti & Shirley N. Dita
Phonology of Indonesian English
Lisa Lehnen, Ninja Schulz & Carolin Biewer
Expanding beyond variety? Challenges of categorising and structurally describing English(es) in geolocated social media data
Jakob R. E. Leimgruber & Sofia Rüdiger
Expanding horizons in World Englishes research: Introducing the xE+ Network
Philipp Meer
English in Brazil: Initiating corpus-based research from a World Englishes perspective
Susanne Mühleisen
Expanding English in an “Outer Circle French” territory: Postcolonial and global language competition in Mauritius
Chisato Oda
Register variation in the Expanding Circle Englishes: Does it exist?
Edward Jay M. Quinto
English as and for development in Timor-Leste: Perspectives of young Timorese professionals
Guyanne Wilson (University College London), Danica Salazar (Oxford English Dictionary, OUP) & Amanda Thomas (Oxford English Dictionary, OUP)
Ariane Macalinga Borlongan & Yuuki Ino
Diachronic corpora of Philippine English and Japanese English
Robert Fuchs & Tjorven Halves
Introducing the Corpus of Historical Indian English
Christian Mair
Postcolonial internationalisms in the OED: A new stratum of the English lexicon?
Danica Salazar & Amanda Thomas
The Oxford Corpus of Historical English: Developing a new global resource for research into modern and historical English
Nina Schulz, Carina Stick, Aditya Upadhyaya, Lisa Lehnen & Carolin Biewer
Genre development, comparability and representativeness: Rethinking the structure of diachronic corpora using insights from the compilation of the Diachronic Corpus of Hong Kong English (DC-HKE)
Foluke Olayinka Unuabonah
Exploring the Historical Corpus of English in Nigeria: A case study of stance markers in Nigerian English
Guyanne Wilson
Beyond newspapers: Increasing the range of written text-types in the Historical Corpus of English in Trinidad