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Middle and Early Modern English Texts
ISSN: 2235-0136
This series is conceived to facilitate the edition of unpublished scientific treatises written in Late Middle English (late 13th century to the very early 16th century) as well as the publication of monographs dealing with their transmission, palaeographical and dialectal features, and/or their lexical, syntactic and pragmatic characteristics. The second aspect of the series seeks to favour studies specializing in linguistic variation or any of the multi-faceted aspects of the Middle English language even from a diachronic perspective. The Late Middle English Texts series is directed towards a wide scholarly readership that includes Textual Edition, Textual Criticism and Transmission – especially on electronic and digital formats both as standalone and online –, Ecdotics, History of Science, History of the English Language and Linguistics, Late Medieval Studies, History of Cultural Artifacts and Librarianship. The chronological scope we contemplate will range approximately from the mid 1200's to the early 1500's, and will include both manuscripts, incunabula and early prints that have come down to us in English, with the occasional excursion into analogues in other languages. Editions will include codicological and language studies that will enhance the relevance of the text within the cultural transmission European framework. The series includes both scholarly and academic editions and monograph studies with a specialised and comprehensive focus. Thematic and teaching textual anthologies will also be considered for the series. We do not aim primarily at publishing collected papers from conferences, symposia, meetings and other scholarly reunions, unless the occasion had a very relevant topic and was strongly coherent and specialised in its discussions. Each publication is subject to a rigorous blind double peer-review system that involves at least five readers from five different institutions (Universities or Research Institutes).
5 publications
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The Use and Development of Middle English
Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Middle English, Cambridge 2008©2013 Edited Collection -
Semantics and Word Formation
The Semantic Development of Five French Suffixes in Middle English©2011 Monographs -
Culinary verbs in Middle English
©2014 Monographs -
Love and Virtue in Middle English and Middle Scots Poetry
©2021 Monographs -
Studies in Old and Middle English
©2012 Edited Collection -
Essays and Studies in Middle English
9th International Conference on Middle English, Philological School of Higher Education in Wrocław, 2015©2017 Edited Collection -
Historical English Word-Formation and Semantics
©2013 Edited Collection -
Methods and Data in English Historical Dialectology
©2004 Conference proceedings -
Current Explorations in Middle English
Selected papers from the 10th International Conference on Middle English (ICOME), University of Stavanger, Norway, 2017©2019 Conference proceedings -
Studies in English and European Historical Dialectology
©2009 Edited Collection -
Historical Englishes in Varieties of Texts and Contexts
The Global COE Program, International Conference 2007©2008 Conference proceedings -
Historical and Collective Memory in the Middle and Far East
©2021 Edited Collection -
Word Derivation in Early Middle English
©2008 Thesis -
Semantic Erosion of Middle English Prepositions
©2011 Monographs -
Metadiscourse in Middle English and Early Modern English Religious Texts
A corpus-based study©2009 Thesis -
Middle English Names of Medical Preparations
Towards a Standard Medical Terminology©2018 Monographs -
Studies in Middle English Forms and Meanings
©2007 Conference proceedings -
Early Middle English Word Formation
Semantic Aspects of Derivational Affixation in the AB Language©1993 Monographs -
Middle English from Tongue to Text
Selected Papers from the Third International Conference on Middle English: Language and Text, held at Dublin, Ireland, 1-4 July 1999©2002 Conference proceedings -
Pragmatic Aspects of Reported Speech
The Case of Early Modern English Courtroom Discourse©2007 Thesis