Micro-change and Macro-change in Diachronic Syntax
Edited by Eric Mathieu and Robert Truswell
Author Information
Edited by Eric Mathieu, Associate Professor, Dept of Linguistics, University of Ottawa, and Robert Truswell, Chancellor's Fellow, School of Philosophy, Psychology, and Language Science, University of Edinburgh
Eric Mathieu is Associate Professor at the University of Ottawa. He completed his PhD in 2002 at University College London. His research focuses on Modern and Old French, and on the Algonquian language Ojibwe. His work has been published in a number of journals including Linguistic Inquiry, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, Lingua, Probus, and Linguistic Variation. He is also co-author of The Syntax and Semantics of Split Constructions (Palgrave, 2004) and co-editor of Variation within and across Romance Languages (Benjamins, 2011).
Robert Truswell is a Chancellor's Fellow in the school of Philosophy, Psychology, and Language Science at the University of Edinburgh and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Ottawa. His research covers a range of topics associated with syntax-external influences on syntactic phenomena, and his previous OUP publications are Events, Phrases, and Questions (2011) and Syntax and its Limits (2013, with Raffaella Folli and Christina Sevdali). He is also the editor of the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of Event Structure.
Contributors:
Hezekiah Akiva Bacovcin, University of Pennsylvania
Heather Burnett, CNRS Paris 7
Ailis Cournane, New York University
Sarah G. Courtney, Cornell University
Lieven Danckaert, Ghent University
Aaron Ecay, University of York
Katalin É. Kiss, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Nikolas Gisborne, University of Edinburgh
Paul Hirschbühler, University of Ottawa
Lukasz Jedrzejowski, University of Potsdam
Marie Labelle, Université du Québec à Montréal
Nikolaos Lavidas, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Caitlin Light, University of York
Eric Mathieu, University of Ottawa
Yohei Ono, Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Tokyo
Gertjan Postma, Meertens Institute Amsterdam
Christine Meklenborg Salvesen, University of Oslo
Meredith Tamminga, University of Pennsylvania
Michelle Troberb, University of Toronto Mississauga
Robert Truswell, University of Edinburgh
George Walkden, University of Manchester
Joh Whitman, Cornell University