REFERENCES
Electronic Corpora
- Davies, Mark. 2004. BYU-BNC. (Based on the British National Corpus from Oxford University Press). http://corpus.byu.edu/bnc/.
- Davies, Mark. 2007. TIME Magazine Corpus: 100 million words, 1920s–2000s. http://corpus.byu.edu/time/.
- Davies, Mark. 2008. The Corpus of Contemporary American English: 450 million words, 1990–present. http://corpus.byu.edu/COCA/.
- Davies, Mark. 2012. The Corpus of American Soap Operas: 100 million words, 2001–2012. http://corpus.byu.edu/SOAP/.
Secondary Sources
- Biber, Douglas, Stig Johansson, Geoffrey Leech, Susan Conrad & Edward Finegan. 1999. Longman grammar of spoken and written English. London and New York: Longman.
- Carter, Ronald & Michael McCarthy. 1999. The English get-passive in spoken discourse: Description and implication for an interpersonal grammar. English Language and Literature 3(1),41–58.
- Chappell, Hilary. 1980. Is the get-passive adversative? Papers in Linguistics 13, 411–452.
- Fukaya, Teruhiko. 1993. Motivations for deferred prepositions. Sophia Linguistica 33, 101–129.
- Haegeman, Liliane. 1985. The get-passive and Burzio’s generalization. Lingua 66, 53–77.
- Hoffmann, Thomas. 2014. Preposition placement in English: A usage-based approach. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Hopper, Paul J. & Elizabeth Closs Traugott. 2003. Grammaticalization, 2nd edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Huddleston, Rodney & Geoffrey K. Pullum. 2002. The Cambridge grammar of the English language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Hundt, Marianne & Christian Mair. 1999. ‘Agile’ and ‘uptight’ genres: The corpus-based approach to language change in progress. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 4(2),221–242.
- Leech, Geoffrey. 2004. Recent grammatical change in English: Data, description, theory. In Karin Aijmer & Bengt Altenberg (eds.), Advances in corpus linguistics, 61–81. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
- Leech, Geoffrey, Marianne Hundt, Christian Mair & Nicholas Smith. 2009. Change in contemporary English: A grammatical study. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Mair, Christian. 1997. Parallel corpora: A real-time approach to the study of language change in progress. In Magnus Ljung (ed.), Corpus-based studies in English, 195–209. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
- Mair, Christian. 2006. Twentieth-century English: History, variation and standardization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Nevalainen, Terttu & Helena Raumolin-Brunberg. 2003. Historical sociolinguistics: Language change in Tudor and Stuart England. London and New York: Longman.
- Olofsson, Arne. 2009. Half a century of relative monitoring: On the 1959 which-hunt in Scientific American. Moderna Språk 102(2),3–11.
- Persson, Gunnar. 1990. Meanings, models and metaphors: A study in lexical semantics in English ( Umeå Studies in the Humanities 92). Stockholm: Almqvist and Wiksell.
- Pinker, Steven. 1994. The language instinct: How the mind creates language. New York: HarperCollins.
- Pullum, Geoffrey K. 2014. Fear and loathing of the English passive. Language and Communication 37(7),60–74.
- Quirk, Randolph, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech, & Jan Svartvik. 1985. A comprehensive grammar of the English language. London and New York: Longman.
- Smitterberg, Erik. 2008. The progressive and phrasal verbs: Evidence of colloquialization in nineteenth-century English? In Terttu Nevalainen, Irma Taavitsainen, Päivi Pahta & Minna Korhonen (eds.), The dynamics of linguistic variation: Corpus evidence on English past and present, 269–289. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
- Strunk, Jr., William & E. B. White. 2000. The elements of style, 4th edn. New York: Allyn and Bacon.
- Toyota, Junichi. 2008. Diachronic change in the English passive. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Trotta, Joe. 2010. Whose rules rule? Grammar controversies, popular culture and the fear of English from below. Nordic Journal of English Studies 9(3),41–65.
- Williams, Joseph M. 1990. Style: Toward clarity and grace. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.