- 
			Norman Blake 'Excellent 
			in Shakespeare'  
- 
			Silvia Bruti 'Address pronouns 
			in Shakespeare's English: a re-appraisal in terms of markedness'
			 
- 
			Jonathan Culpeper and Merja Kytö
			'Gender voices in the spoken interaction of the past: a pilot 
			study based on Early Modern English trial proceedings'  
- 
			Christiane Dalton-Puffer 'Is 
			there a social element in English word stress? Explorations into a 
			non-categorial treatment of English stress: a long-term view'
			 
- 
			Roberta Facchinetti 'The modal 
			verb shall between grammar and usage in the nineteenth 
			century'  
- 
			Gabriella Mazzon 'Social 
			relations and forms of address in the Canterbury Tales'
			 
- 
			Robert McColl Millar (with Dauvit 
			Horsbroch) 'Covert and overt language attitudes to the Scots 
			tongue expressed in the Statistical accounts of Scotland'
			 
- 
			Roderick W. McConchie 'Fashionable 
			idiolects? The use of the negative prefix dis- 1520-1620'
			 
- 
			Anneli Meurman-Solin 'On the 
			conditioning of geographical and social distance in language 
			variation and change in Renaissance Scots'  
- 
			Stephen J. Nagle, Margaret A. Fain 
			and Sara L. Sanders 'The influence of political correctness on 
			lexical and grammatical change in late-twentieth-century English'
			 
- 
			Terttu Nevalainen and 
			Helena Raumolin-Brunberg 'The changing role of London on the 
			linguistic map of Tudor and Stuart England'  
- 
			Arja Nurmi 'The rise and 
			regulation of periphrastic do in negative declarative 
			sentences: a sociolinguistic study'  
- 
			Clausdirk Pollner 'Shibboleths 
			galore: the treatment of Irish and Scottish English in histories of 
			the English language'  
- 
			Ute Smit 'Ethnolinguistic 
			identity as common denomenator: a socio-historical investigation of 
			the lexical items for "people"in South African English'  
- 
			Margaret J.-M. Sönmez 
			'Perceived and real differences between men's and women's spellings 
			of the early to mid-seventeenth century'  
- 
			Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade 
			'Sociohistorical linguistics and the observer's paradox'