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Thu, 03/19/2026 - 14:05
Navigating the world of academic writing and publishing can be overwhelming. This book provides the antidote. Written by a team of authors who are at different stages of their careers, this book provides hands-on advice and strategies to turn academic writing from a daunting experience to a joyful journey. It gives a complete overview of the publishing process, from how to write an academic paper, chapter or book, to areas that are often overlooked, such as indexing a book, working with images a

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 14:05
Due to a long history of contact, the Chadic languages are the internally most diverse of the Afroasiatic language families, especially in terms of their sound systems. In this ground-breaking study, the author draws on his extensive research experience to unpack the morpho-phonological principles that underpin the languages' diverse prosody effects, arguing that massive variation results from diachronic processes called 'prosodification' of segmental units. The study compares data from 66 of th

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 14:05
We are delighted to announce that KU Leuven (Belgium) will host the 9th conference of the International Society for the Linguistics of English (isLE9). The conference theme is "Symmetries and asymmetries". Confirmed keynote speakers include Bert Cappelle (University of Lille), Devyani Sharma (University of Oxford), Catherine Travis (The Australian National University), and George Walkden (University of Konstanz).

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 13:05
2026. iii, 161 pp. Table of Contents Articles Emotional content affects interpreters: Insights from psychophysiological, behavioral, and self-report measures Paweł Korpal, Katarzyna Jankowiak & Łukasz D. Kaczmarek pp. 1–29 Interpreters’ multimodal management of rapport: Does video remote interpreting have an impact? A quantitative approach Dries Cavents, Jelena Vranjes, July De Wilde & Manon Kinaupenne pp. 30–57 Applying n-gram-based evaluation metrics to assess human inter

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 13:05
2025. vi, 222 pp. Table of Contents Editorial Editorial note p. 1 Introduction Dimensions of multilingualism and language contact Shobha Satyanath pp. 2–20 Commentaries Insights from the Heritage Language Variation and Change in Toronto Project (HLVC) Naomi Nagy pp. 21–30 Talk across the Pacific: Developments in understanding traditional and modern multilingualism Danielle Barth, Laura Arnold, Kira Davey, Caroline Hendy, Saurabh Kumar Nath, Keira Mullan & Sam Pas

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 13:05
2026. iii, 165 pp. Table of Contents Articles linguistiques Construções de elevação com adjetivos e a preposição de : Variação e desvio no português contemporâneo Telmo Móia pp. 1–27 Comparativa de los tratamientos hispano-lusos: Normas y pautas morfológicas Miguel Vázquez-Larruscaín pp. 28–54 Articles littéraires La Slovacchia di Jana Karšaiova e Michaela Šebőková Karol Karp pp. 55–69 L’utopie cyborgienne et transhumaniste dans les romans de Raymond Roussel Herme

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 12:05
2026. iv, 231 pp. Table of Contents Articles Narrating violent victimization by positioning self and others Mari Hatavara & Lois Presser pp. 1–23 A quantitative analysis of semantic characteristics and success of personal narratives on social media Huixia Sun, Xueqi Xiang & Jin Wang pp. 24–64 A different perspective on epistemics and deontics: Conveying story evaluation through the construction of status-stance relations via direct reported speech Dorien Van De Mieroop, Me

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 12:05
2025. vi, 194 pp. Table of Contents Editorial Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) and writing for scholarly publication A. Mehdi Riazi pp. 195–202 Articles The transformative nature of AI on academic scholarship: The emergence of an AI-Enabled Scholarship Divide Steven Wright pp. 203–219 Ensuring ethical standards in scholarly publishing: The future of AI-driven knowledge production Ahmadreza Mohebbi pp. 220–247 Transforming scholarly writing pedagogy and me

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 12:05
2026. iv, 155 pp. Table of Contents Editorial pp. 1–3 Articles Sound communities: A quantitative proposal for studying bilingual speech Charlie Nagle, Melissa M. Baese-Berk, Mark Amengual & Joseph V. Casillas pp. 4–32 The realization of Spanish /b d ɡ/ by Czech LX speakers Radek Skarnitzl & Petr Čermák pp. 33–57 The effects of orthography and cognate status on L2 German pronunciation Sinem Sonsaat-Hegelheimer, John M. Levis & Caglar Yildirim pp. 58–83 Exploring th

Thu, 03/19/2026 - 11:05
2026. iii, 114 pp. Table of Contents Editorial Editors’ note p. 1 Articles Shattering the glass ceiling of language barriers in bilingual and multilingual classrooms Samrat Bisai pp. 2–22 Language and equality inside the classroom: Translanguaging practices in a private university in Pakistan Saima Faisal Muhammad & Josephine Olufunmilayo Alexander pp. 23–47 The role of translanguaging in shaping L2 motivation: A study of multilingual EFL learners Onur Özkaynak & Hi

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 15:05
SUMMARY This book, “Applying Corpus Linguistics to Illness and Healthcare” by Elena Semino, Paul Baker, Gavin Brookes, Luke Collins and Tony McEnery is a recent and substantial contribution to applied corpus linguistics, offering a comprehensive methodological and analytical guide to corpus-based research in the domain of illness and healthcare. The book consists of thirteen chapters, which can be grouped into three main clusters: (i) foundational steps of corpus-based research, including

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 15:05
SUMMARY A Descriptive Grammar of Ollari Gadaba (DGOG) is a revision of Mendem Bapuji’s 2019 dissertation for the Centre for Applied Linguistics and Translation Studies at the University of Hyderabad, under the guidance of Panchanan Mohanty. Ollari Gadaba, spoken in the Koraput district of Odisha (formerly, Orissa), is a Central Dravidian language, closely related to Kolami, Naiki and Parji (see Krishnamurti 2003). It is not to be confused with Gotub Gadaba, a language belonging to the Munda b

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 15:05
Title: New Immigrants and Multilingual Linguistic Landscape in Taiwan Publication Year: 2026 Publisher: Multilingual Matters Author(s): Ching-Yu Na and Serafín M. Coronel-Molina Reviewer: Teresa Wai See Ong Summary Written by Ching-Yu Na and Serafín M. Coronel-Molina, New Immigrants and Multilingual Linguistic Landscape in Taiwan is a monograph that explores the linguistic landscape transformation observed in Taoyuan City when immigration takes place. There are eight chapters i

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 14:05
Description: As one of Europe’s leading research universities, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) in Munich is committed to the highest international standards of excellence in research and teaching. Building on its more than 500-year-long tradition, it offers a broad spectrum that covers all areas of knowledge within its 18 Faculties, ranging from the humanities, law, economics and social sciences, to medicine and the natural sciences. The Faculty of Languages and Literatures invites ap

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 14:05
The research group Quantitative Lexicology and Variational Linguistics (QLVL) at the Department of Linguistics of the University of Leuven is looking to hire a salaried predoctoral researcher and PhD candidate to staff the FWO-funded project "BUG-OR-FEATURE: Variation, optionality, and dysfluencies" (PIs: Benedikt Szmrecsanyi, Thomas Van Hoey & Matt Hunt Gardner). In IT speak, a bug is an unintended (software) error. A feature is an intended design functionality. The project explores if langu

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 14:05
Call for Papers: This conference aims to support and promote research that significantly utilizes sources in Turkish or other Turkic languages by graduate students from fields including but not limited to literature, history, linguistics, language education, and related fields at North American academic institutions. It also offers a collaborative platform for the student presenters to share their work and exchange research ideas with their peers and the colleagues in attendance from the fiel

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 13:05
Special early-career poster session at 54th Poznań Linguistic Meeting (Sunday, 20 Sep 2026) This session will be geared towards researchers at the early stages of their academic journey, including undergraduate, MA, PhD, and early-career post-PhD scholars, wishing to present their projects to a larger scientific community and, thus, receive valuable feedback on their work. Proposals are welcome from individuals at any stage of their career. Researchers should submit their abstracts via the on

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 13:05
Ever since the beginning of the minimalist enterprise in the early 90-ies, the Program has been trying to reconcile the ambitious task of formulating a comprehensive, compact and streamlined theory of grammar with the need for broad empirical coverage and adequacy. In the process, the theory has impacted research on particular constructions and languages and, in turn, particularly successful empirical analyses fed theory-oriented proposals. For the past 35 years the Program has been evolving but

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 13:05
Call for Papers: For this edition of the Poznań Linguistic Meeting, we invite participants to engage with the leitmotif “Linguistics in dialogue: looking for parallels beyond language”. We would like to encourage reflection on how linguistic phenomena can be illuminated/informed by other domains. Linguistics has long relied on analogies to describe, explain, and model language: language as a system, as a network, as a biological capacity, as a cultural phenomenon. Such metaphors often sha

Wed, 03/18/2026 - 12:05
Call for Papers: Important note: Conference venue change: From Macao Polytechnic University to The Hong Kong Hang Seng University Conference date change: May 16-17 to May 15-16, 2026 English Department, The Hang Seng University of Hong Kong, Global Digital Applied Linguistics Association (GloDAL) & Methodology SIG, Kansai Chapter, Language Education and Technology (LET), Japan May 15–16, 2026 · Friday and Saturday, The Hong Kong Hang Seng University · On‑site only Submission deadli

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