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All Outputs (3)

‘In both our languages’: Greek-Latin code-switching in Roman literature (2015)
Journal Article
Mullen, A. (2015). ‘In both our languages’: Greek-Latin code-switching in Roman literature. Language and Literature, 24(3), https://doi.org/10.1177/0963947015585244

After a short introduction to code-switching and Classics, this article offers an overview of the phenomenon of code-switching in Roman literature with some comments on possible generic restrictions, followed by a survey of Roman attitudes to the pra... Read More about ‘In both our languages’: Greek-Latin code-switching in Roman literature.

Bilingualism and multilingualism in the Roman world (2015)
Journal Article
Mullen, A. (2015). Bilingualism and multilingualism in the Roman world. https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195389661-0197

Roman authors referred to Latin and Greek as utraque lingua (both our languages), and the study of Classics has traditionally entailed an appreciation of the entanglement and complex relations between Latin and Greek language and literature. However,... Read More about Bilingualism and multilingualism in the Roman world.

Why diachronicity matters in the study of linguistic landscapes (2015)
Journal Article
Pavlenko, A., & Mullen, A. (2015). Why diachronicity matters in the study of linguistic landscapes. Linguistic Landscape, 1(1-2), https://doi.org/10.1075/ll.1.1-2.07pav

It is commonly argued that the proliferation of urban writing known as linguistic landscapes represents “a thoroughly contemporary global trend” (Coupland, 2010: 78). The purpose of this paper is to show that linguistic landscapes are by no means mod... Read More about Why diachronicity matters in the study of linguistic landscapes.