Organized by

Nikolaos Lavidas is Associate Professor of Diachronic Linguistics at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (Department of Language-Linguistics, Faculty of  English, School of Philosophy). His research covers a range of topics associated with  Indo-European historical linguistics and the directions of language change (in particular the development of transitivity and voice in Indo-European languages),  syntax-semantics interface, (historical) language contact and historical corpora.

Antonio R. Revuelta Puigdollers is Associate Professor of Ancient and Modern Greek at the Autonomous University of Madrid and a sworn translator of Modern Greek.  His main research areas are the semantics, syntax and pragmatics of Greek; his work also includes incursions into other languages such as Latin. He is the co-author of a  new syntax of Ancient Greek and has authored several entries in Brill’s  Encyclopaedia of Ancient Greek Language and Linguistics.

Katrin Axel-Tober is Professor of German Linguistics at the University of Tübingen, Germany. Her research focuses on the synchronic and diachronic syntax of German. She has published the books Studies on Old High German Syntax: Left Sentence Periphery, Verb Placement and Verb-Second (Benjamins, 2007) and (Nicht-)kanonische Nebensätze im Deutschen: Synchrone und diachrone Aspekte (Walter de Gruyter, 2012) as well as several articles on sentence structure, complementizers, null subjects, and modal verbs. 

Artemij Keidan is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the Italian Institute of Oriental  Studies, Sapienza University, Rome. His main areas of expertise include the history of grammatical thought, Indo-European morphology, philosophy of language, and  issues in syntax and phonology, both general and applied to ancient (such as  Sanskrit, Latin, Gothic, Slavic languages) and modern languages.

Joanna Kopaczyk is Senior Lecturer in Scots and English (English Language & Linguistics) at the University of Glasgow. She is a historical linguist with a special interest in the medieval and early modern history of the Scots language. She uses corpus-driven methods to uncover textual standardisation and she is also interested in formulaicity in language, as revealed through all kinds of repetitive patterns. She has recently co-edited books on Applications of Pattern-Driven Methods in Corpus Linguistics (John Benjamins, 2018) and on Binomials in the History of English (Cambridge University Press, 2017).

 

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CIVIS COURSE ASSISTANT

          

Vassileios Symeonidis 

PhD Candidate in Linguistics 

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens 

 

Thomi Gamagkari 

PhD Candidate in Linguistics 

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki