Folia Linguistica Historica

Title Publication Date Language Citations
ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NUMERAL ‘ONE’ AS AN INDEFINITE MARKER1981/01/01English37
FROM PURPOSIVE TO INFINITIVE ― A UNIVERSAL PATH OF GRAMMATICIZATION1989/01/0133
Adjunct, modifier, discourse marker: On the various functionsof rightin the history of English2006/01/01German14
THE ENVIRONMENT FOR OPEN SYLLABLE LENGTHENING IN MIDDLE ENGLISH1982/01/0110
A FORMAL ACCOUNT OF GRAMMATICALISATION IN THE HISTORY OF ROMANCE FUTURES1992/01/0110
SOME QUESTIONS FOR THE DEFINITION OF "STYLE" IN SOCIO-HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS1985/01/017
THE ORIGIN AND SPREAD OF THE ACCUSATIVE AND INFINITIVE CONSTRUCTION IN ENGLISH1989/01/017
REMARKS ON THE HISTORY OF THE INDO-EUROPEAN INFINITIVE1981/01/01English6
Language vs. grammatical tradition in Ancient India: How real was Pāṇinian Sanskrit?2013/01/016
SYNTACTIC COMPLEXITY, RELATIVIZATION AND STYLISTIC LEVELS IN MIDDLE SCOTS1981/01/01English6
FUNCTIONAL COMPENSATION AND SOUTHERN PENINSULAR SPANISH /s/ LOSS2002/01/016
INVERSE VERB FORMS IN SIBERIA:EVIDENCE FROM CHUKCHEE, KORYAK, AND KAMCHADAL1980/01/016
THE GERUND IN EARLY MODERN ENGLISH: EVIDENCE FROM THE HELSINKI CORPUS1996/01/016
THEORIES OF LINGUISTIC PREFERENCES AS A BASIS FOR LINGUISTIC EXPLANATIONS1983/01/015
Change and variation in morphonotactics2010/01/015
Die Indogermanische Perfektreduplikation2006/01/01German5
EXPLORING EXAPTATION IN LANGUAGE CHANCE2005/01/01English5
PERSISTENCE AND RENEWAL IN THE RELATIVE PRONOUN PARADIGM: THE CASE OF ITALIAN2005/01/01English5
ON THE REVERSIBILITY OF MERGERS: /W/, /V/ AND EVIDENCE FROM LESSER-KNOWN ENGLISHES2003/01/015
Attribution in Romance: Reconstructing the oral and written tradition2013/01/015
Motion events in English: the emergence and diachrony of manner salience from Old English to Late Modern English2012/01/014
Participant continuity and narrative structure: Defining discourse marker functions in Old English2013/01/014
Copularisation processes in French: Constructional intertwining, lexical attraction, and other dangerous things2013/01/014
The Northern Subject Rule in first-person singular contexts in fourteenth-fifteenth-century Scots2013/01/014
HOW MINIMAL IS PHONOLOGICAL CHANCE?2004/01/014
THE PHARYNGELS IN HEBREW: LINGUISTIC CHANGE IN APPARENT TIME1984/01/014
QUANTIFYING QUALIFIERS IN ANGLO-SAXON CHARTER BOUNDARIES1993/01/014
ON THE NONGEMINATION OF /r/ IN WEST GERMANIC TWENTY-ONE YEARS LATER2004/01/014
TRACING THE ORIGIN OF UVULAR R IN THE GERMANIC LANGUAGES1986/01/013
ASPECTS OF PUNCTUATION IN THE OLD ENGLISHAPOLLONIUS OF TYRE2005/01/01English3