Brill, 2010. — 333 p. — (The Northern World 48). — ISBN 9004180117.
The twelve articles in this volume promote the growing contacts between medieval linguistics and medieval cultural studies generally. Articles address medieval English linguistics, and the interrelation in Anglo-Saxon England between Latin and vernacular
Angio-Latin Bilingualism before 1066: Prospects and Limitations
Interlinguistic Communication in Bede's Historia ecclesiastica gentis Angiorum
Quae non habet intellectum: The Disappearance ofFifth-Foot Spondees from Dactylic Rexarneter Verse
The Representations ofEmotions Connected to Dreams and Visions in Pre-Carolingian Continental and Anglo-Latin narratives
The Kirkdale Dedication Inscription and its Latin Models: romanitas in Iate Anglo-Saxon Yorkshire
Linguistic Geography, Demography, and Monastic Community: Seribal Language at Bury St Edmunds
Sense and Sensibility: Old English Semantics and the Lexicographer's Point of View
Spatial Understanding ofTime in early Germanic Cultures: the Evidence ofOld English Time Words and Norse Mythology
The Development of the Basic Colour Terms ofEnglish
The Lexicon of Mind and Memory: Mood andMindin Old and Middle English
Anather Subordinator, An't Please You: A Diachronic Study of Conditional And
Translating Chaucer's Power Play into Modern English and Finnish