- Bagnall, Nicholas
In defence of clichés
- Bailey, Richard W
The Idea of World English
- Bailey, Richard W
Yes, but WHICH dictionary?
- Bailey, Richard W.
Celebrating Tom's century – 100 issues of English Today
- Bailey, Richard W.
Dialects of Canadian English
- Bakshi, Raj N.
Indian English
- Baldauf, Richard B.
An extensive literature
- Baldauf, Richard B., Jr
Will CLT bail out the bogged down ELT in Bangladesh?
- Balteiro, Isabel
When Spanish owns English words
- Bamiro, Edmund O.
Innovation in Nigerian English
- Banu, Rahela
Code-switching in Bangladesh
- Barber, Katherine
CanOD can do: an e-mail interview
- Barker, William
Turning a dictionary inside out
- Baron, Dennis
Dial 1-800-M4MURDR
- Baron, Dennis
Going out of style?
- Baron, Dennis
The ugly grammarian
- Barrs, Keith
Unlocking the encoded English vocabulary in the Japanese language
- Barry, Peter
The name of the shoe
- Baskaran, Loga
The Malaysian English mosaic
- Battenburg, John D.
English in the Maghreb
- Battenburg, John D.
Linguistics in the English department: irreconcilable differences?
- Battin, Patricia
Brittle books
- Bauer, Laurie
The Fat Owl of the Remove meets the Ness Peril!
- Bauer, Laurie
Hitting a moving target
- Baumgardner, Robert J.
English in Mexican Spanish
- Baumgardner, Robert J.
The indigenization of English in Pakistan
- Bayley, Susan
The trouble with ET?
- Beal, Joan
‘All the Lads and Lasses’: lexical variation in Tyne and Wear
- Beal, Joan C.
The grocer's apostrophe: popular prescriptivism in the 21st century
- Beavis, Bill
Salt on the Tongue
- Becker, Holger
The etymology of math(s)
- Bekker, Ian
The Formation of South African English
- Beniger, James R.
The new icons – icons of change?
- Bennett, Martin
Artichokes and sequins: the legacy of Arabic
- Benson, Morton
The trouble with TESOL
- Benson, Phillip
A language in decline?
- Bergeron, David
Heteronyms
- Berns, Margie
English in the European Union
- Berry, Roger
Determiners: a class apart
- Berry, Roger
You could say that: the generic second-person pronoun in modern English
- Betts, Jerome
In and on
- Bianco, Joseph Lo
Uncle Sam and Mr Unz
- Biao, Zuo
Lines and circles, West and East
- Bierce, Ambrose
The devil and all his words
- Bin Mohamed Ali, Haja Mohideen
Islamic terms in contemporary English
- Björkman, Beyza
‘So where we are?’ Spoken lingua franca English at a technical university i [...]
- Blaisdell, Bob
Further tales from New York City: (1) Norbert: reading and re-reading, (2) [...]
- Blaisdell, Bob
The jockey and his horse
- Blaisdell, Bob
Shame
- Blaisdell, Bob
Shto eta? – learning Russian, teaching English
- Blaisdell, Bob
So what's in a book?
- Blaisdell, Bob
Some notes on teaching myself Russian
- Blaisdell, Bob
The Soup Kitchen Writing Workshop
- Blaisdell, Bob
Talk shows
- Blaisdell, Bob
Tarzan of the Russians
- Blake, Renée
Hearing the voice of a new generation
- Blake, Renée
Second generation West Indian Americans and English in New York City
- Blommaert, Jan
Lookalike language
- Bo Li, Tian
Learning English in corporate China
- Bobda, Augustin Simo
British or American English: Does it matter?
- Bobda, Augustin Simo
English pronunciation in sub-Saharan Africa as illustrated by the NURSE vow [...]
- Bobda, Augustin Simo
Further demystifying word stress
- Bobda, Augustin Simo
Linguistic apartheid: English language policy in Africa
- Boh Peng, Chia
Singaporeans' reactions to Estuary English
- Bolinger, Dwight
The Doolittling of English
- Bolinger, Dwight
The remarkable double IS
- Bolton, Kingsley
Editorial
- Bolton, Kingsley
Editorial
- Bolton, Kingsley
Editorial: Whose standard is it anyway?
- Bolton, Kingsley
English in Asia, Asian Englishes, and the issue of proficiency
- Bolton, Kingsley
English in China today
- Bolton, Kingsley
English in China Today
- Bolton, Kingsley
English Today and Tomorrow
- Bolton, Kingsley
English yesterday and today
- Bolton, Kingsley
From Africa to Australia by train and plane
- Bolton, Kingsley
From Beowulf to Bollywood
- Bolton, Kingsley
From English worldwide to graveyard humour
- Bolton, Kingsley
From the new editors
- Bolton, Kingsley
How far will English go?
- Bolton, Kingsley
A moving and mystifying target language?
- Bolton, Kingsley
Tom McArthur's English Today
- Bolton, Whitney
Checking the spellers
- Bolton, Whitney
CmC and e-mail: casting a wider net
- Bolton, Whitney
Nota Bene
- Bolton, Whitney F
Verbal Conversion
- Boswell, Colin
The French Reaction
- Botha, Yolande
Corpus evidence of anti-deletion in Black South African English noun phrase [...]
- Bowers, Roger
English 2000: ‘A networked future’
- Boyd, John
Pop grammarians and the death of English
- Boyle, Joseph
Changing attitudes to English
- Boyle, Joseph
Job interviews in Hong Kong
- Boyle, Joseph
What hope for a trilingual Hong Kong?
- Bradbury, Jane
New and original combinations
- Bradford, Barbara
Upspeak in British English
- Bralich, Philip A.
The new SAT and fundamental misunderstandings about grammar teaching
- Brewer, Charlotte
Prescriptivism and descriptivism in the first, second and third editions of [...]
- Brewer, Derek
How ‘English’ is English Literature?
- Bristow, Alec
The unsuitability of forms
- Brosius, Christiane
Moodling beyond Bollywood: e-teaching the language, literature and culture [...]
- Broughton, Bill
Tense matters
- Brown, Adam
Singaporeans' reactions to Estuary English
- Brown, Adam
Tongue slips and Singapore English pronunciation
- Brunt, Richard
Medical eponyms revisited
- Bruthiaux, Paul
Favouring French loanwords
- Bruthiaux, Paul
Missing in action: verbal metaphor for information technology
- Buck, R. A.
Marginalizing grammar
- Buck, R. A.
Why? and How? – Teaching the history of the English language in our n [...]
- Bulley, Michael
Consonantal beginnings
- Bulley, Michael
Consonantal beginnings
- Bulley, Michael
Defending Strunk and White
- Bulley, Michael
Do you put your eggs or your ex in your exit?
- Bulley, Michael
Dyooty or jyooty? Back to the beginnings
- Bulley, Michael
The final future of t
- Bulley, Michael
Impossible, in a possible sort of way
- Bulley, Michael
Intellectual franglais
PDF
(32 KB)
- Bulley, Michael
It isn't /hæt/, it's /hat/!
- Bulley, Michael
No such things as nouns
- Bulley, Michael
Not to be found in the brain
- Bulley, Michael
Spelling reform – a lesson from the Greeks
- Bulley, Michael
There ain't no grammaticality here
- Bulley, Michael
Unicode for beginners
- Bulley, Michael
Was that necessary?
- Bulley, Michael
What price?
- Bulley, Michael
Who controls the language?
- Bulley, Michael
Why no mips?
- Bulley, Michael
A wild gene chase
- Burbano-Elizondo, Lourdes
‘All the Lads and Lasses’: lexical variation in Tyne and Wear
- Dr Dr Burchfield, Robert
Burchfield on Grammar
- Burchfield, Robert
A northern new zealand newspaper
- Sir Sir Burgh, John
Creating Anglophiles
- Burke, Sheila
ICT teaching
- Burridge, Kate
Linguistic cleanliness is next to godliness: taboo and purism
- Burridge, Kate
Political correctness: euphemism with attitude
- Burrows, Christian
An evaluation of task-based learning (TBL) in the Japanese classroom
- Busse, Ulrich
How Fowler became 'The Fowler': an anatomy of a success story
- Butcher, Carmen Acevedo
The case against the ‘native speaker’
- Butcher, Paige
Unvernacular Appalachia: an empirical perspective on West Virginia dialect [...]
- Butler, Melanie
What the summer schools did next