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期刊名称:FOLIA LINGUISTICA

ISSN:0165-4004
出版频率:Semi-annual
出版社:WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH, GENTHINER STRASSE 13, BERLIN, GERMANY, D-10785
  出版社网址:http://www.degruyter.de/
期刊网址:http://www.folialinguistica.com/
主题范畴:LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

FOLIA LINGUISTICA is the peer-reviewed journal of the Societas Linguistica Europaea. It is published by Mouton de Gruyter.

FOLIA LINGUISTICA appears twice a year (in Spring and Autumn; two double issues, ca. 450 pages in all) and covers all non-historical areas in the traditional disciplines of general linguistics (phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics), and also sociological, discoursal, computational and psychological aspects of language and linguistic theory. Other areas of central concern are grammaticalization and language typology.

The journal consists of scientific articles presenting results of original research, review articles, critical surveys of research in specific areas, book reviews, and a miscellanea section carrying brief descriptive reports and discussion notes. In addition, proposals from prospective guest editors for occasional special issues on selected current topics are welcomed.

FOLIA LINGUISTICA is covered in the following indexing and abstracting services:

Arts & Humanities Citation Index, Bibliographie Linguistique/Linguistic Bibliography, Cultures, Langues, Textes: La Revue de Sommaires, Current Contents/Arts & Humanities, IBSS International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, International Bibliography of Periodical Literature in the Humanities and Social Sciences (IBZ), Linguistics Abstracts Online, Linguistics and Language Behaviour Abstracts, MLA International Bibliography, PsycINFO, Swets Information Services, The Year's Work in English Studies.

The journal's current ranking on the European Reference Index for the Humanities (ERIH) is B. Journals in this category are described as international level publications fulfilling the following requirements: a) good reputation among researchers of the field in different countries; b) a genuine, varied and regular international cohort of contributors and readership; c) consistently high-quality scholarly content; d) broad consensus within the field concerning international status and visibility.

To join the Societas Linguistica Europaea and receive FOLIA LINGUISTICA, click here; dues for personal membership in the society are EUR 30 per year. For institutional subscriptions please contact Mouton de Gruyter.

FOLIA LINGUISTICA is typeset at the Department of English of the University of Santiago de Compostela, under the editorship of Teresa Fanego.


Instructions to Authors

NOTES to CONTRIBUTORS

[Revised 24 July 2007; download this document as a pdf]

1. Contact details

All correspondence concerning FOLIA LINGUISTICA should be sent to:

Professor Teresa Fanego
Editor, Folia Linguistica
Department of English
University of Santiago de Compostela
E-15782 Santiago de Compostela, SPAIN
e-mail: iafanego@usc.es

2. How to submit a paper for consideration for publication in FoL

Contributions are to be in the English language only. Spelling should be British English or American English and should be consistent throughout the paper. Contributors whose native language is not English should have their manuscripts carefully checked by a native speaker.

Submission of an article implies that it has not previously been published, and is not currently under consideration for publication elsewhere. Only papers of no more than 40 pages formatted as specified below, including references and footnotes, will normally be accepted.

Authors submitting papers for consideration should send an anonymized electronic copy of the paper submitted as a pdf file and in a word-processor format compatible with PC/Windows XP/MS Word, both as e-mail attachments. Within forty-eight hours of submission authors will receive an acknowledgement of receipt via e-mail.

Author details should not be included in the electronic files: the name(s) and address(es) of the author(s) should appear in the body of the e-mail message accompanying the submission, together with the paper's title and the total number of words.

Texts should be in Times New Roman 12 pt., single-spaced, printed on one side of the page only, with all pages numbered consecutively.

Notes must appear as footnotes, not as endnotes. All figures, charts and tables must be left in the appropriate place in the manuscript rather than moved to the end. An abstract of about 100-200 words is required already at this stage; do not duplicate the abstract in the introduction or the conclusions, and vice versa.

3. The reviewing process

Submitted articles are sent to two qualified reviewers for peer review. FoL seeks to conduct the review process and respond to authors regarding the outcome of the review within 8 weeks of receipt.

4. Form of manuscripts accepted for publication

Authors whose manuscripts have been accepted for publication should send an electronic copy of the article submitted as a pdf file and in a word-processor format compatible with PC/Windows XP/MS Word, both as e-mail attachments.

Concerning the overall form of the manuscript, authors are asked to keep formatting to a minimum; do not use right-justified margins and do not divide words at ends of lines.

The various components of the manuscript should follow the specifications below:

4.1 Title page

The title page should include the title of the article, an abstract of about 100-200 words, suggested keywords (from four to six), author's name and affiliation, and full address, including e-mail and fax information, indicating -in case there is more than one author- who will be responsible for proofreading and correspondence.

An acknowledgements footnote should be marked with a superscript '1' (not an asterisk) at the end of the title.

4.2 Sections and headings

Manuscripts should be divided into sections and subsections as needed, all with appropriate titles. All headings start at the left margin: level 1 is in bold face; level 2 in roman type; level 3 in italics. Please follow the typographic conventions and punctuation of the headings and subheadings in these Notes to Contributors; do not end a heading with a full stop and do not capitalize words other than the first words and proper names.

The first section of the paper is numbered section 1, i.e. 1. Introduction, rather than 0. Introduction.

4.3 Illustrations and tables

These should be numbered consecutively and should stand at the appropriate place in the manuscript, not on separate pages at the end of the manuscript. All tables and figures should be labelled underneath as Table 1 or Figure 1 (in italics) and given a caption (in roman).

4.4 Typeface

The generic font is Times New Roman 12 pt. Meanings of forms or utterances are to be placed between single quotation marks. Cited forms or utterances, whether in the language of the contribution or in a different language, are to be given in italics. To avoid confusion, expressions of foreign origin but used as part of the text (such as in Engl. mutatis mutandis, ad hoc, etc.) should be in roman type, not in italics. To mark a technical term at its first use or definition, or to give emphasis to a word or phrase in the text, small capitals should be used.

Use double quotation marks for short direct quotations (except for quotes within quotes, which should appear between single quotation marks). Double quotation marks can also be used sparingly for terms used in a semi-technical sense or terms whose validity is questioned ("scare quotes").

4.5 Numbered examples

All examples should be numbered progressively (do not re-start in each subsection). Include all the example numbers in parentheses, i.e. (4), (5), etc. Example numbers are at the left margin.

Examples in footnotes should be numbered with small roman numerals, also in parentheses, i.e. (i), (ii), etc.

All forms in languages not normally written in the Roman alphabet, including Greek and Russian, need to be transcribed or transliterated, unless the focus is on specific aspects of the original orthography. In the case of languages (such as Greek, Russian or Hebrew) for which there is an established transliteration system, that system should be employed. Elsewhere, IPA symbols are to be employed.

Sentences, phrases and words in languages other than modern English which are set out as numbered examples are followed by a line of word-for-word (or morpheme-for-morpheme) gloss and a line of idiomatic translation, all double-spaced. Glosses are left-aligned with the appropriate words or morphemes of the original. The translation is included in single quotation marks and the original data are italicized. Linguistic category labels appearing in the gloss are in small capitals. Note also the use of small letters to identify sub-examples.

For instance:

For fuller details and a list of standard abbreviations for category labels see C. Lehmann's (2004) "Interlinear morphemic glossing" or any other conventions for interlinear glosses, such as The Leipzig Glossing Rules.

4.6 References in the body of the text

In the body of the text, use author(s) last name(s) plus year, plus page numbers if required. E.g. "Malkiel (1959: 126-128) has observed..." or "As argued in Malkiel (1959: 126-128)..."

With more than one work listed, references are ordered chronologically, not alphabetically, unless two or more works by different authors have the same year of publication. E.g. "... have semantic import (see also Rohdenburg 1996, Nevalainen & Raumolin-Brunberg 2000, Mair 2002)". Note especially the ampersand (&) immediately preceding the surname of the second (or last) co-author.

Give page numbers in full, as in Malkiel (1959: 126-128); do not use f. or ff. (as in Malkiel 1959: 126 ff.).

4.7 Quotations in the body of the text

Short quotations (2-3 lines) are placed in the text between double quotation marks. Longer quotations should be indented and set off from the regular text, with the source of the quotation added at the end. These extracts are not enclosed in quotation marks.

4.8 Footnotes

Notes must appear as footnotes, not as endnotes. They should be numbered consecutively, starting from number 1. Place note numbers after all punctuation marks.

4.9 References in the bibliography

Bibliographical references are listed alphabetically at the end of the contribution. References should be as complete and informative as possible.

Do not use lines or blank spaces for repeated names of authors or editors - always type the names as in the first entry. Each entry is formatted as a hanging paragraph. Note especially the following:

a. in the case of joint authors or editors use the ampersand (&), not the word and;

b. names of periodicals should not be abbreviated;

c. the first names of authors and editors must be given in full (unless they themselves regularly abbreviate their names);

d. use capitalization of all lexical words for journal titles, and capitalize only the first word (plus proper names and the first word after a colon) for book/dissertation titles and article/chapter titles;

e. if an edition other than the original is quoted from, this should be reflected in the bibliographical entry, as in the Hopper & Traugott entry given below.

f. do NOT use single or double quotation marks around article and chapter titles.

Examples:

4.9.1 Books, edited volumes and dissertations

Brinton, Laurel J. 1988. The development of English aspectual systems: Aspectualizers and post-verbal particles. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Hopper, Paul J. & Elizabeth Closs Traugott. 2003 [1993]. Grammaticalization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Li, Charles N., ed. 1977. Mechanisms of syntactic change. Austin & London: University of Texas Press.

Babko-Malaya, Olga. 1999. Zero morphology: A study of aspect, argument structure, and case. New Brunswick, NJ: RutgersUniversity PhD Dissertation.

Vosberg, Uwe. 2004. Determinanten grammatischer Variation: Verschiebungsprozesse bei satzwertigen Komplementstrukturen im Neuenglischen. Paderborn: University of Paderborn doctoral dissertation.

4.9.2 Contributions to collective volumes

When more than one of the contributions is cited from a single collection, then the reference to the volume constitutes a bibliographical entry of itself, and a short reference to the volume appears in the article entry (as in the Langacker example below).

Biber, Douglas, Edward Finegan & Dwight Atkinson. 1994. ARCHER and its challenges: Compiling and exploring "A Representative Corpus of Historical English Registers". In Udo Fries, Gunnel Tottie & Peter Schneider, eds. Creating and using English language corpora. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1-14.

Langacker, Ronald W. 1977. Syntactic reanalysis. In Li, ed. 57-139.

Lehmann, Christian. 2004. Interlinear morphemic glossing. In Geert Booij, Christian Lehmann, Joachim Mugdan & Stavros Skopeteas, eds. Morphologie / Morphology. Ein internationales Handbuch zur Flexion und Wortbildung / An International Handbook on Inflection and Word-Formation. 2. Halbband. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 1834-1857.

4.9.3 Articles in journals

Iwakura, Kunihiro. 1992. On the domain of Head. Linguistic Analysis 22: 78-95.

Langacker, Ronald W. 1992. Prepositions as grammatical(izing) elements. Leuvense Bijdragen 81: 287-309.

5. Proofs

Authors will receive proofs for correction, which must be returned by dates determined by the publication schedule.

6. Offprints

On publication, an electronic offprint (a PDF file) will be sent free of charge to each author.


Editorial Board

Prof.  Dr. Teresa Fanego
Universidad de Santiago de Compostela
Facultad de Filología
Department of English
15782 Santiago de Compostela
Spain
E-mail:
iafanego@usc.es

All correspondence concerning FOLIA LINGUISTICA HISTORICA should be sent to:

Prof. Dr. Hans Henrich Hock

Department of Linguistics
University of Illinois
4016A Foreign Languages Building
707 South Mathews Avenue
Urbana, IL 61801
USA
E-mail: hhhock@uiuc.edu



Editorial Board of FOLIA LINGUISTICA

John Ole Askedal
University of Oslo, Norway

Christopher Beedham
University of St Andrews, Great Britain

Balthasar Bickel
University of Leipzig, Germany

Sonia Cristofaro
University of Pavia, Italy

Wolfgang U. Dressler
University of Vienna, Austria

Hans Henrich Hock
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA

Knud Lambrecht

Editor

Teresa Fanego, University of Santiago de Compostela

Managing Editor

Javier Parez-Guerra, University of Vigo

Assistants to the Editor

Paloma Niñez-Pertejo, University of Santiago de Compostela
Victor Reynolds, University of Santiago de Compostela

Editorial Board

John Ole Askedal, University of Oslo
Christopher Beedham, University of St Andrews
Balthasar Bickel, University of Leipzig
Sonia Cristofaro, University of Pavia
Wolfgang U. Dressler, University of Vienna
Knud Lambrecht, University of Texas at Austin
Amina Mettouchi, University of Nantes
Anna Siewierska, University of Lancaster
Jean-Christophe Verstraete, University of Leuven
Douglas C. Walker, University of Calgary




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