About the editor(s)
Gaberell Drachman (Ph.D. 1969 University of Chicago) is Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at the University of Salzburg, Austria. His Doctoral Thesis was on (Northwestern Amerindian Salish) Twana. In addition, he has published extensively in all areas of general linguistics, largely concerning Modern Greek. Brian D. Joseph (Ph.D. 1978, Harvard University) is Distinguished University Professor of Linguistics and The Kenneth E. Naylor Professor of South Slavic Linguistics at The Ohio State University. He is former editor of Diachronica and of Language. He specializes in the linguistics of Greek (from the Mycenaean up through the Modern periods), Albanian, and the Balkans, as well as general historical linguistics. He has authored numerous books and articles in these areas, including: The Synchrony and Diachrony of the Balkan Infinitive (Cambridge University Press, 1983, reiss.2009). Anna Roussou (PhD 1994, University College London), is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of Patras. Her research is in theoretical linguistics, with particular emphasis on syntax (comparative, diachronic, including also aspects of acquisition and learning) and its interfaces with semantics and morphology. She is the author of the books Syntactic Change: A minimalist approach to grammaticalization (with Ian Roberts, Cambridge University Press), and Simpliromatikoi Deiktes (Patakis). Her journal and other publications include papers on various aspects of Greek syntax.
Editorial Board
E. Anagnostopoulou, University of Crete, Greece A. Arvaniti, University of California San Diego, USA A. Giannakidou, University of Chicago, USA A. Georgakopoulou, King's College London, UK G. Horrocks, University of Cambridge, UK A. Malikouti-Drachman, University of Salzburg, Austria S. Matthaios, University of Thessaloniki, Greece P. Pappas, Simon Fraser University, Canada A. Ralli, University of Patras, Greece A. Revithiadou, University of Thessaloniki, Greece M. Sifianou, University of Athens, Greece P. Trudgill, University of Adger, Norway I. Tsimpli, University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Abstracting & Indexing
Linguistic Bibliography; LingAb; IBR/IBZ; MLA IB; L&LBA; INIST (CNRS)
Instructions for Author(s)
Readership
Researchers in Greek Linguistics, Greek Language, Hellinists, Classicists and general linguists.
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The Journal of Greek Linguistics (JGL) is a newly established peer-reviewed international journal dedicated to the descriptive and theoretical study of the Greek language from its roots in Ancient Greek down to present-day dialects and varieties, including those spoken in Asia Minor, Cyprus, Tsakonia, and the Greek diaspora. It aims to offer a focused outlet for publication of first-class research in Greek Linguistics, broadly construed. JGL’s goal is not only to reach linguists interested in the Greek language but also to engage the linguistics community and Hellenists more generally. The input to JGL will thus comprise any topic relevant to Greek linguistics, in the broadest sense, but with some preference given to material with wider relevance to specific subfields within linguistics proper. The intention is therefore on the one hand to encourage discussions and research that illuminate different aspects --- theoretical, historical, and descriptive -- of general linguistics using Greek data, and on the other hand to offer innovative solutions to problems and issues specific to the description and analysis of the Greek language. Greek has played a central role in linguistics and the study of language for centuries. JGL will bring the language into a key position in current debate within Linguistics and related fields.
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