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

Instructions to Authors
Submission You can easily submit your manuscript online. Simply go to https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/lingvan and you will be guided through the whole peer-reviewing and publishing process.
Your benefits of publishing with us:
- Rapid online publication with short turnaround times
- Continuous online publication of newly-accepted articles throughout the year
- High impact
- High quality double blind peer-review
- Easy-to-use online submission system
- Free publication of color figures and no page charges
- Every article easily discoverable because of SEO and comprehensive abstracting and indexing services
- Secure archiving by De Gruyter and the independent archiving service Portico
Submission process
- The target length for contributions is 3,000-4,000 words (plus references and ancillary material)
- Before submission please check our De Gruyter Mouton journal style sheet
- Initial submissions must be anonymous: the authors’ names should not appear in the text and the authors’ identities deleted from the file properties
Please note
We look forward to receiving your manuscript!
Hybrid Open Access Authors have the option to publish their article under an open access license. The standard article processing charge for a hybrid open access article is 2,000 Euro (plus VAT if applicable). Please note that corresponding authors from institutions with which we have a transformative agreement, can publish open access without paying the fee. More information on the eligible institutions and articles can be found here.
However, the Publisher and Editors of Linguistics Vanguard recognise that some authors may not have the necessary funding to pay the full article processing charge to ensure their work is available in an Open Access format. Equally, some articles are of insufficient length to justify the full rate. Please do contact us if you find yourself in either situation and we will do our best to show some flexibility.
Editorial Board
Editors-in-Chief
Alexander Bergs Osnabrück University, Germany
Abigail C. Cohn Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
Jeff Good University at Buffalo, NY, USA
Area Editors
Christine Dimroth (University of Münster, Germany) [second language acquisition, bilingualism, information structure] Susanne Flach (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland) [cognitive linguistics, quantitative corpus linguistics, (diachronic) construction grammar, lexico-grammar; English] Diana Forker (University of Jena, Germany) [language documentation, functional language description, language contact; East Caucasian, West Caucasian, Kartvelian, Armenian] Alice Gaby (Monash University, Australia) [Australian Aboriginal languages, cognitive linguistics, linguistic anthropology] Eitan Grossman (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) [typology, historical linguistics, language contact; Afroasiatic languages (especially Egyptian-Coptic and Semitic)] Mie Hiramoto (National University of Singapore, Singapore) [sociolinguistics, linguistics anthropology, gender & sexuality] Thomas Hoffmann (Catholic University Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, Germany) [construction grammar, usage-based linguistics, corpus linguistics; varieties of English] Guillaume Jacques (CRLAO, CNRS Paris, France) [historical linguistics, language documentation, grammaticalization; Sino-Tibetan, Algonquian, Siouan language families] Shigetu Kawahara (University of Keio, Japan) [phonetics, phonology, experimental phonology; Japanese] Laurel Mackenzie (New York University, USA) [sociolinguistics, language variation and change, dialectology; varieties of English, varieties of French] Arne Nagels (University of Mainz, Germany) [neurolinguistics, psycholinguistics, language dysfunctions/disorders] Bhuvana Narasimhan (University of Colorado, USA) [first language acquisition, discourse-pragmatics, lexical semantics; Hindi, Tamil languages] Jason Shaw (Yale University, USA) [phonetics, phonology, prosody] Kaius Sinnemäki (University of Helsinki, Finland) [typology, language contact, morphology, language complexity] Rebecca Starr (National University of Singapore, Singapore). [sociolinguistics, language variation and change, acquisition of variation; Japanese, Chinese languages, world Englishes] Remi van Trijp (Sony Computer Science Laboratory Paris, France) [computational linguistics, construction grammar, evolutionary linguistics] Eva Wittenberg (University of California, San Diego, USA) [psycholinguistics, language processing, linguistic architecture; German, English] Igor Yanovich (University of Tübingen, Germany) [computational linguistics, historical linguistics, semantics] Jochen Zeller (University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa) [morphology, syntax, lexicon; Bantu languages] Georgia Zellou (University of California, Davis, USA) [phonetics, phonology, speech perception]
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