Anonymous c. 1835. The Anglo-Saxon Meteor; or Letters, in Defence of Oxford, Treating of the Wonderful Gothic Attainments of John M. Kemble, of Trinity College, Cambridge.
Anonymous [B.] 1834. [Untitled letter to the editor, Cambridge, 5 Sept.] Gentleman’s Magazine, new series 2: 363–4.
Anonymous [I. J.] 1834. [Untitled letter to the editor, Oxford, 20 July] Gentleman’s Magazine, new series 2: 140.
Anonymous [J. I.] 1834. [Untitled letter to the editor, Trinity College, Oxford, 24 Nov.] Gentleman’s Magazine, new series 3: 42–4.
Anonymous [K. N.] 1834. ‘On the Progress of Anglo-Saxon Literature in England.’ Gentleman’s Magazine, new series 2: 483–6.
Anonymous [M. N.] 1834. [Untitled letter to the editor, Cambridge, 1 Sept.] Gentleman’s Magazine, new series 2: 362.
Anonymous [T. W.] 1834a. [Untitled letter to the editor, 2 Aug.] Gentleman’s Magazine, new series 2: 259–60.
Anonymous [T. W.] 1834b. [Untitled letter to the editor, Oxford, 6 Sept.] Gentleman’s Magazine, new series 2: 362–3.
Anonymous [T. W.] 1835. [Untitled letter to the editor, Oxford, 13 Jan.] Gentleman’s Magazine, new series 3: 167–8.
Aarsleff, Hans 1962. ‘The Early History of the Oxford English Dictionary.’ Bulletin of the New York Public Library 66: 417–39.
Aarsleff, Hans 1967. The Study of Language in England, 1780–1860. Princeton University Press.
Aarsleff, Hans 1982. ‘Bréal, “la sémantique” and Saussure.’ In his From Locke to Saussure: Essays on the Study of Language and Intellectual History. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 382–98.
Ackerman, Gretchen P. 1982. ‘J. M. Kemble and Sir Frederic Madden: “Conceit and Too Much Germanism”?’ In Berkhout and Gatch (eds.), pp. 167–81.
Adams, J. N. and Swain, Simon 2002. ‘Introduction.’ In J. N. Adams, Mark Janse and Simon Swain (eds.). Bilingualism in Ancient Society: Language Contact and the Written Text. Oxford University Press, pp. 1–20.
Anderson, Benedict 1991. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. Rev. edn. London and New York: Verso.
Arberry, A. J. 1946. Asiatic Jones: The Life and Influence of Sir William Jones (1746–1794), Pioneer of Indian Studies. London, New York and Toronto: Longmans, Green and Co.
Arbuckle, John 1970. ‘August Schleicher and the Linguistics/Philology Dichotomy: A Chapter in the History of Linguistics.’ Word 26: 17–31.
Arnauld, Antoine and Lancelot, Claude 1975. General and Rational Grammar: The Port-Royal Grammar. Jacques Rieux and Bernard E. Rollin (ed. and trans.). The Hague and Paris: Mouton.
Ashcroft, Bill and Ahluwalia, Pal 2009. Edward Said. Rev. 2nd edn. London and New York: Routledge.
Atherton, Mark 1995. ‘Grasping Sentences as Wholes: Henry Sweet’s Idea of Language Study in the Early Middle Ages.’ Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 96: 177–85.
Atherton, Mark 1996. ‘Henry Sweet’s Psychology of Language Learning.’ In Klaus D. Dutz and Hans-J. Niederehe (eds.). Theorie und Rekonstruction. Munich: Nodus Publikationen, pp. 149–68.
Atherton, Mark 2010. ‘Priming the Poets: The Making of Henry Sweet’s Anglo-Saxon Reader.’ In David Clark and Nicholas Perkins (eds.). Anglo-Saxon Culture and the Modern Imagination. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, pp. 31–49.
Augustine of Hippo 1948. ‘Answer to Skeptics.’ In Denis J. Kavanagh (trans.). Writings of Saint Augustine. New York: Cima Publishing Company, i: 85–225.
Austin, J. L. 1975. How to Do Things with Words. 2nd edn. J. O. Urmson and Marina Sbisà (eds.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Bacon, Francis 2000. The Advancement of Learning, Michael Kiernan (ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Bailey, Richard W. 2000. ‘“This Unique and Peerless Specimen”: The Reputation of the OED.’ In Mugglestone (ed.) 2000a, pp. 207–27.
Baldick, Chris 1983. The Social Mission of English Criticism, 1848–1932. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Ballantyne, Tony 2002. Orientalism and Race: Aryanism in the British Empire. New York: Palgrave.
Barber, Charles 1997. Early Modern English. Edinburgh University Press.
Barnbrook, Geoff 2005. ‘Johnson the Prescriptivist? The Case for the Prosecution.’ In Lynch and McDermott (eds.), pp. 92–112.
Bate, W. Jackson 1982. ‘The Crisis in English Studies.’ Harvard Magazine 85: 46–53.
Beare, W. 1955. ‘Pollicis Ictus, the Saturnian and Beowulf.’ Classical Philology 50: 89–97.
Bede 1969. Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum. Bertram Colgrave and R. A. B. Mynors (eds.). Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Benes, Tuska 2008. In Babel’s Shadow: Language, Philology and the Nation in Nineteenth-century Germany. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press.
Benjamin, Walter 1994. The Correspondence of Walter Benjamin 1910–1940. Gershom Scholem and Theodor W. Adorno (ed. and annotated) and Manfred R. Jacobson and Evelyn M. Jacobson (trans.). University of Chicago Press.
Benjamin, Walter 1995–2000. Gesammelte Briefe. 6 vols. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlag.
Bentinck, W. C. 1999. ‘Resolution of the Governor-general of India in Council in the General Department, dated 7 March 1835.’ In Zastoupil and Moir (eds.), pp. 194–6.
Benzie, William 1983. Dr. F. J. Furnivall: Victorian Scholar Adventurer. Norman, OK: Pilgrim Books.
Berkhout, Carl T. and Gatch, Milton McC. (eds.). 1982. Anglo-Saxon Scholarship: The First Three Centuries. Boston: G. K. Hall & Co.
Bhabha, Homi K. 1994. The Location of Culture. London and New York: Routledge.
Birrell, T. A. 1965. ‘The Society of Antiquaries and the Taste for Old English, 1705–1840.’ Neophilologus 50: 107–17.
Bjork, Robert E. 1997. ‘Nineteenth-Century Scandinavia and the Birth of Anglo-Saxon Studies.’ In Allen J. Frantzen and John D. Niles (eds.). Anglo-Saxonism and the Construction of Social Identity. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, pp. 111–32.
Bloch, Bernard 1966. ‘Leonard Bloomfield.’ In Sebeok (ed.), ii: 508–18.
Bloch, R. Howard 1990. ‘New Philology and Old French.’ Speculum 65: 38–58.
Bloomfield, Leonard 1925. ‘Why a Linguistic Society?’ Language 1: 1–5.
Boag, John 1852–3. The Imperial Lexicon of the English Language. 2 vols. Edinburgh: A. Fullarton & Co.
Bolt, Christine 1971. Victorian Attitudes to Race. London and Toronto: Routledge & Kegal Paul, and the University of Toronto Press.
Bomhard, Allan R 1999. ‘Next of Kin: The Search for Relatives of Indo-European.’ In Sheila Embleton, John E. Joseph and Hans-Joseph Niederehe (eds.). The Emergence of the Modern Language Sciences: Studies on the Transition from Historical-Comparative to Structural Linguistics in Honour of E. F. K. Koerner. Philadelphia and Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, ii: 101–8.
Bonfante, Giuliano 1954. ‘Ideas on the Kinship of the European Languages from 1200 to 1800.’ Cahiers d’histoire mondiale 1: 679–99.
Bopp, Franz 1816. Über das Conjugationssystem der Sanskritsprache in Vergleichung mit jenem der griechischen, lateinischen, persischen und germanischen Sprache. Frankfurt am Main: Andreäischen Buchhandlung.
Bopp, Franz 1845–50. A Comparative Grammar of the Sanscrit, Zend, Greek, Latin, Lithuanian, Gothic, German and Sclavonic Languages. Translated from the German principally by Edward B. Eastwick, conducted through the press by H. H. Wilson. 3 vols. London: Madden and Malcolm.
Bopp, Franz 1974. Analytical Comparison of the Sanskrit, Greek, Latin and Teutonic Languages, Shewing the Original Identity of their Grammatical Structure. New edn. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Bosch, Lourens P. van den. 2002. Friedrich Max Müller: A Life Devoted to the Humanities. Leiden, Boston and Cologne: Brill.
Boswell, James 1998. Life of Johnson. R. W. Chapman (ed.). Oxford University Press.
Bosworth, J. 1823. The Elements of Anglo-Saxon Grammar, with Copious Notes, Illustrating the Structure of the Saxon and the Formation of the English Language: and a Grammatical Praxis with a Literal English Version: to which are Prefixed, Remarks on the History and Use of the Anglo-Saxon and an Introduction on the Origin and Progress of Alphabetic Writing, with Critical Remarks by the Rev. Chas. O’Conor, D. D. and Exemplified by Engravings of Inscriptions, and Facsimiles of Saxon and Other Ancient Manuscripts. London: Printed for Harding, Mavor and Lepard.
Botterill, Steven (ed. and trans.) 1996. Dante ‘De vulgari eloquentia.’Cambridge University Press.
Brandt, H. C. G. 1989. ‘“How Far Should Our Teaching and Text-books Have a Scientific Basis?” PMLA (1884–5).’ In Graff and Warner (eds.), pp. 28–33.
Brewer, Charlotte 1996. Editing ‘Piers Plowman’: The Evolution of the Text. Cambridge University Press.
Brewer, Charlotte 2007. Treasure-house of the Language: The Living OED. New Haven, CT, and London: Yale University Press.
Brewer, Charlotte 2009. ‘The OED Supplements.’ In Cowie (ed.), i: 260–78.
Bromley, J. 1959. The Man of Ten Talents: A Portrait of Richard Chenevix Trench, 1807–86, Philologist, Poet, Theologian, Archbishop. London: SPCK.
Brookfield, Frances M. 1906. The Cambridge ‘Apostles.’New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons.
Bryant, Jacob 1774–6. A New System, or, an Analysis of Ancient Mythology: Wherein an Attempt is Made to Divest Tradition of Fable; and to Reduce the Truth to its Original Purity. 3 vols. London: Printed for T. Payne…; P. Elmsly …; B. White…; J. Walter…
Bunsen, Christian Charles Josias (ed.) 1854. Outlines of the Philosophy of Universal History, Applied to Language and Religion. 2 vols. London: Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans.
Burchfield, R. W. 1972–86. Oxford English Dictionary Supplement. 4 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Burchfield, R. W. 1989. ‘The Oxford English Dictionary and its Historical Principles.’ In his Unlocking the English Language. London and Boston, MA: Faber and Faber, pp. 166–76.
Burke, Edmund, III and Prochaska, David (eds.) 2008a. Genealogies of Orientalism: History, Theory, Politics. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
Burke, Edmund, III and Prochaska, David 2008b. ‘Introduction: Orientalism from Postcolonial Theory to World History.’ In Burke and Prochaska (eds.) 2008a, pp. 1–71.
Burrow, J. W. 1967. ‘The Use of Philology in Victorian England.’ In Robert Robson (ed.). Ideas and Institutions of Victorian Britain: Essays in Honour of George Kitson Clark. New York: Barnes and Noble, pp. 180–204.
Busby, Keith (ed.) 1993. Towards a Synthesis?: Essays on the New Philology. Amsterdam and Atlanta, GA: Rodopi.
Cameron, Angus, Amos, Ashley Crandell and Healey, Antonette diPaolo 1986–. The Dictionary of Old English. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.
Cannon, Garland 1964. Oriental Jones: A Biography of Sir William Jones (1746–1794). New York: Asia Publishing House.
Cannon, Garland 1965–6. ‘Sir William Jones and Dr. Johnson’s Literary Club.’ Modern Philology 63: 20–37.
Cannon, Garland (ed.) 1970. The Letters of Sir William Jones. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Cannon, Garland 1990. The Life and Mind of Oriental Jones: Sir William Jones, the Father of Modern Linguistics. Cambridge University Press.
Carlyle, Thomas 1993. On Heroes, Hero-Worship and the Heroic in History. Berkeley, Los Angeles and Oxford: University of California Press.
Carver, Martin 2009. ‘On Reading Anglo-Saxon Graves.’ In Roberts et al., pp. 81–102.
Cerquiglini, Bernard 1999. In Praise of the Variant: A Critical History of Philology. Betsy Wing (trans.). Baltimore, MD, and London: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Chaudhuri, Nirad C. 1974. Scholar Extraordinary: The Life of Professor the Rt. Hon. Friedrich Max Müller, P. C. London: Chatto and Windus.
Clarke, M. L. 1959. Classical Education in Great Britain, 1500–1900. Cambridge University Press.
Clausen, Wendell 1990. ‘Philology.’ In Ziolkowski 1990a (ed.), pp. 13–15.
Cohn, Bernard S. 2008. ‘The Command of Language and the Language of Command.’ In Burke and Prochaska (eds.), pp. 102–53.
Coleridge, Derwent 1860. ‘Observations on the Plan of the Society’s Proposed New English Dictionary.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 7: 152–68.
Coleridge, Herbert 1859a. A Glossarial Index to the Printed English Literature of the Thirteenth Century. London: Trübner.
Coleridge, Herbert 1859b. ‘Hints towards the Explanation of Some Hard Words and Passages in English Writers, by Contributors to the Society’s Proposed Dictionary.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 6: 67–74.
Coleridge, Herbert 1860. ‘A Letter to the Very Rev. the Dean of Westminster.’ In Trench 1860, pp. 71–8.
Coleridge, Herbert 1860–1. ‘On the Exclusion of Certain Words from a Dictionary.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 7: 37–44.
Connell, Philip 2006. ‘British Identities and the Politics of Ancient Poetry in Later Eighteenth-Century England.’ Historical Journal 49: 161–92.
Considine, John 2000. ‘The Lexicographer as Hero: Samuel Johnson and Henri Estienne.’ Philological Quarterly 79: 205–24.
Conybeare, John Josias 1809. The Romance of Octavian, Emperor of Rome; Abridged from a Manuscript in the Bodleian Library. Oxford: Collingwood and Co.
Conybeare, John Josias 1814a. ‘Account of an Anglo-Saxon Paraphrase of the Phœnix attributed to Lactantius, contained in the Exeter Manuscript … Read 4th Feb. 1813.’ Archaeologia 17: 193–7.
Conybeare, John Josias 1814b. ‘Communication of an Inedited Fragment of Anglo-Saxon Poetry … Read 28th November, 1811.’ Archaeologia 17: 173–5.
Conybeare, John Josias 1814c. ‘Observations on the Metre of the Anglo Saxon Poetry … Read 25th of Feb. 1813.’ Archaeologia 17: 257–66.
Conybeare, John Josias 1826. Illustrations of Anglo-Saxon Poetry by John Josias Conybeare, M. A., &c., Late Prebendary of York and Vicar of Bath Easton; Formerly Student of Christ-Church, and Successively Professor of Anglo-Saxon and of Poetry in the University of Oxford. Edited, together with additional notes, introductory notices, &c., by his brother William Daniel Conybeare, MA, &c. Rector of Sully. London: Printed for Harding and Lepard.
Cook, Guy 2001. ‘“Philosopher Pulled the Lower Jaw of the Hen”: Ludicrous Invented Sentences in Language Teaching.’ Applied Linguistics 22–3: 366–87.
Copenhaver, Brian P. 2005. ‘Valla Our Contemporary: Philosophy and Philology.’ Journal of the History of Ideas 66: 507–25.
Corbett, John, McClure, J. Derrick and Stuart-Smith, Jane 2003. ‘A Brief History of Scots.’ In John Corbett, J. Derrick McClure and Jane Stuart-Smith (eds.). The Edinburgh Companion to Scots. Edinburgh University Press, pp. 1–16.
Court, Franklin E. 1992. Institutionalizing English Literature: The Culture and Politics of Literary Study, 1750–1900. Stanford University Press.
Court, Franklin E. 2001. The Scottish Connection: The Rise of English Literary Study in Early America. Syracuse University Press.
Cowie, A. P. (ed.) 2009. The Oxford History of English Lexicography. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Craig, Randall 2000. Promising Language: Betrothal in Victorian Law and Fiction. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
Crowley, Tony 2008. ‘Class, Ethnicity and the Formation of “Standard English”.’ In Momma and Matto (eds.), pp. 303–12.
Culler, Jonathan 1990. ‘Anti-Foundational Philology.’ In Ziolkowski (ed.) 1990a, pp. 49–52.
Culler, Jonathan 2002. ‘The Return to Philology.’ Journal of Aesthetic Education 36: 12–16.
Curtius, Ernst Robert 1990. European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages. Willard R. Trask (trans.). Princeton University Press.
Curzan, Anne. 2000. ‘The Compass of the Vocabulary.’ In Mugglestone (ed.) 2000a, pp. 96–109.
Damico, Helen (ed.) 1998. Medieval Scholarship: Biographical Studies on the Formation of a Discipline. Vol. 2: Literature and Philology. New York and London: Garland.
Davies, Anna Morpurgo 2004. ‘Saussure and Indo-European Linguistics.’ In Sanders (ed.), pp. 9–29.
Dean, James M. (ed.) 1996. Medieval English Political Writings. Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute Publications.
DeJean, Joan 1997. Ancients against Moderns: Culture Wars and the Making of a Fin de Siècle. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.
de Man, Paul 1986a. The Resistance to Theory. Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press.
de Man, Paul 1986b. ‘The Resistance to Theory.’ In de Man 1986a, pp. 21–6.
Derrida, Jacques 1998. Monolingualism of the Other: Or the Prosthesis of Origin. Patrick Mensah (trans.). Stanford, CA: Standard University Press.
Dickins, Bruce 1939. ‘John Mitchell Kemble and Old English Scholarship.’ Proceedings of the British Academy 25: 51–84.
Dobozy, Maria 1998. ‘The Brothers Grimm: Jacob Ludwig Carl (1785–1863), Wilhelm Carl (1786–1859).’ In Damico (ed.), pp. 93–108.
Dorson, Richard M. 1955. ‘The Eclipse of Solar Mythology.’ Journal of American Folklore 68: 393–416.
Downing, David B. 2000. ‘The “Mop-up” Work of Theory Anthologies: Theorizing the Discipline and the Disciplining of Theory.’ Symplokē 8: 129–50.
Eagleton, Terry 2005. The Function of Criticism. London and New York: Verso.
Eagleton, Terry 2008. Literary Theory: An Introduction. Anniversary edition, with a new preface. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Early English Text Society 1865. Report of the Committee, January, 1865. Appended to Of the Orthographie and Congruitie of the Britan Tongue; A Treates, noe shorter then necessarie, for the Schooles, be Alexander Hume, edited from the original MS. In the British Museum, Henry B. Wheatley (ed.). London: Trübner.
East India Company 1999. ‘India Company Charter Act of 1813, section 43 (53 Geo. III, c. 155, s. 43).’ In Zastoupil and Moir (eds.), pp. 90–2.
Einhard 1960. The Life of Charlemagne. Samuel Epes Turner (trans.). Ann Arbor, MI: The University of Michigan Press.
Eliot, George 1981. A Writer’s Notebook, 1854–1879, and Uncollected Writings. Joseph Wiesenfarth (ed.). Charlottesville: Published for the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia by the University Press of Virginia.
Eliot, George 1998. Middlemarch, David Carroll (ed.) Oxford University Press.
Ellis, Alexander J. 1870–2. ‘On Glosik, a Neu system ov Ingglish Speling, Proapoa.zd faur Konkur.rent Eus, in Aurder too Remidi dhi Difek.ts, widhou.t Ditrak.ting from dhi Valeu ov our Prezent Aurthog.rafi.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 14: 89–118.
Ellis, Alexander J. 1873–4. ‘On Professor Max Müller’s Latest Views of the Philosophy of the Origin of Language.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 15: 248–52.
Ellis, Alexander J. 1880–1. ‘Improvement of English Spelling.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 18: 269–309.
Engler, Rudolf 2004. ‘The Making of the Cours de linguistique générale.’ In Sanders (ed.), pp. 47–58.
Evans, Joan 1956. A History of the Society of Antiquaries. Oxford: Printed at the University Press by Charles Batey for the Society of Antiquaries.
Evans, Stephen 2002. ‘Macaulay’s Minute Revisited: Colonial Language Policy in Nineteenth-Century India.’ Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 23: 260–81.
Figueira, Dorothy Matilda 1991. Translating the Orient: The Reception of ‘Śākuntala’ in Nineteenth-Century Europe. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Figueira, Dorothy Matilda 2002. Aryans, Jews, Brahmins: Theorizing Authority through Myths of Identity. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Firth, C. H. 1909. The School of English Language and Literature: A Contribution to the History of Oxford Studies. Oxford and London: B. H. Blackwell and Simpkin, Marshall & Co.
Firth, J. R. 1946. ‘The English School of Phonetics.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 45: 92–131.
Fleischman, Suzanne 1990. ‘Philology, Linguistics and the Discourse of the Medieval Text.’ Speculum 65: 19–37.
Foot, Sarah 1996. ‘The Making of Angelcynn: English Identity before the Norman Conquest.’ Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 6: 25–49.
Forbes, P. B. R. 1933. ‘Greek Pioneers in Philology and Grammar.’ Classical Review 47: 105–12.
Fortson, Benjamin W. 2009. Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction. Malden, MA, and Oxford: Blackwell.
Foucault, Michel 1970. The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences. New York: Pantheon Books.
Franklin, Michael J. 2002a. ‘Cultural Possession, Imperial Control and Comparative Religion: The Calcutta Perspectives of Sir William Jones and Nathaniel Brassey Halhed.’ Yearbook of English Studies 32: 1–18.
Franklin, Michael J. 2002b. ‘“The Hastings Circle”: Writers and Writing in Calcutta in the Last Quarter of the Eighteenth Century.’ In E. J. Clery, Caroline Franklin and Peter Garside (eds.). Authorship, Commerce and the Public: Scenes of Writing, 1750–1850. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 186–202.
Frantzen, Allen J. 1990. Desire for Origins: New Language, Old English and Teaching the Tradition. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Fuller, Steve 2000. Thomas Kuhn, A Philosophical History for Our Times. University of Chicago Press.
Gaisser, Julia Haig 2007. ‘Some Thoughts on Philology.’ Transactions of the American Philological Association 137: 477–81.
Ganim, John M. 2005. Medievalism and Orientalism: Three Essays on Literature, Architecture and Cultural Identity. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Geeraerts, Dirk 2008. ‘Cognitive Linguistics.’ In Momma and Matto (eds.), pp. 618–29.
Geoffrey of Monmouth 2007. The History of the Kings of Britain: An Edition and Translation of ‘De gestis Britonum [Historia regum Britanniae]’. Michael D. Reeve (ed.) and Neil Wright (trans.). Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press.
Giancarlo, Matthew 2001. ‘The Rise and Fall of the Great Vowel Shift? The Changing Ideological Intersections of Philology, Historical Linguistics and Literary History.’ Representations 76: 27–60.
Gibbon, Edward 1994. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. David Womersley (ed.). 3 vols. London: Allen Lane, Penguin Press.
Gilliver, Peter 2000. ‘Appendix II: OED Personalia.’ In Mugglestone (ed.) 2000a, pp. 232–52.
Glare, P. G. W. 1987. ‘Liddell & Scott: Its Background and Present State.’ In Robert Burchfield (ed.). Studies in Lexicography. Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 1–18.
Gneuss, Helmut 1972. ‘The Origin of Standard Old English and Æthelwold’s School at Winchester.’ Anglo-Saxon England 1: 63–83.
Grabes, Herbert 2002. ‘The Cultural Turn of Philology.’ In Hansen (ed.), pp. 51–62.
Graff, Gerald 1987. Professing Literature: An Institutional History. University of Chicago Press.
Graff, Gerald and Warner, Michael (eds.) 1989. The Origins of Literary Studies in America: A Documentary Anthology. New York and London: Routledge.
Grafton, Anthony, Most, Glenn W. and Zetzel, James E. G. 1985. ‘Introduction.’ In F. A. Wolf. Prolegomena to Homer, 1795. Anthony Grafton, Glenn W. Most and James E. G. Zetzel (trans.). Princeton University Press, pp. 3–35.
Grant, Michael 1980. Greek and Latin Authors, 800 bc – ad 1000. New York: H. W. Wilson Company.
Graziosi, Barbara 2002. Inventing Homer: The Early Reception of Epic. Cambridge University Press.
Grimm, Jacob 1840. Andreas und Elene. Cassel: Theodor Fischer.
Grimm, Jacob 1854. [Preface]. In Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm. Deutsches Wörterbuch. Vol. i (cols. i–lviii). Leipzig: Verlag von S. Hirzel.
Grimm, Jacob 1870. Deutsche Grammatik. 4 vols. Berlin: Fred. Dümmlers Verlagsbuchhandlung.
Grimm, Jacob 1880. Geschichte der deutschen Sprache. 4th edn. 2 vols. Leipzig: S. Hirzel.
Grimm, Jacob 1984. On the Origin of Language. Raymond A. Wiley (trans.). Leiden: E. J. Brill.
Guillory, John 2002. ‘Literary Study and the Modern System of the Disciplines.’ In Amanda Anderson and Joseph Valente (eds.). Disciplinarity at the Fin de Siècle. Princeton University Press, pp. 19–43.
Gumbrecht, Hans Ulrich 2003. The Powers of Philology: Dynamics of Textual Scholarship. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
Hall, J. R. 1985. ‘The Conybeare “Cædmon”: A Turning Point in the History of Old English Scholarship.’ Harvard Library Bulletin 33: 378–403.
Hamacher, Werner 2010. ‘From “95 Theses on Philology”.’ PMLA 125: 994–1001.
Hancher, Michael 1998. ‘Gazing at The Imperial Dictionary.’ Book History 1: 156–81.
Hanks, Patrick 2005. ‘Johnson and Modern Lexicography.’ International Journal of Lexicography 18: 243–66.
Hansen, Hans Lauge (ed.) 2002. Changing Philologies: Contributions to the Redefinition of Foreign Language Studies in the Age of Globalisation. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, University of Copenhagen.
Harris, Roy and Taylor, Talbot J. 1997. Landmarks in Linguistic Thought I: The Western Tradition from Socrates to Saussure. 2nd edn. London and New York: Routledge.
Hart, James Morgan 1989. ‘“The College Course in English Literature, How it May Be Improved,” PMLA (1884–5).’ In Graff and Warner (eds.), pp. 34–7.
Hass-Zumkehr, Ulrike 2000. ‘Das Deutsche Wörterbuch von Jacob Grimm und Wilhelm Grimm als Nationaldenkmal.’ Nation und Sprache: Die Diskussion ihres Verhältnisses in Geschichte und Gegenwart. Andreas Gardt (ed.). Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter, pp. 229–46.
Hastings, Warren 1999. ‘Minute by Warren Hastings, Governor-general of Fort William (Calcutta) in Bengal, Recorded in the Public Department, 17 April 1781.’ In Zastoupil and Moir (eds.), pp. 73–6.
Hauer, Stanley R. 1983. ‘Thomas Jefferson and the Anglo-Saxon Language.’ PMLA 98: 879–98.
Herodotus 1987. The History. David Grene (trans.). University of Chicago Press.
Hickes, George 1703. Linguarum Vett. Septentrionalium Thesauri Grammatico-Critici et Archæologici; Pars Prima: Seu Institutiones Grammaticæ ‘Anglo-Saxonicæ, & Mœso-Gothicæ.’Oxoniæ: E Theatro Sheldoniano.
Hockett, Charles F. 1965. ‘Sound Change.’ Language 41: 185–204.
Hoenigswald, Henry M. 1978. ‘The Annus Mirabilis 1876 and Posterity.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 76: 17–35.
Holquist, Michael 2000. ‘Forgetting Our Name, Remembering Our Mother.’ PMLA 115: 1975–7.
Holquist, Michael 2002. ‘Why We Should Remember Philology.’ Profession72–9.
Howatson, M. C. (ed.) 1989. The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature. 2nd edn. Oxford University Press.
Hughes, Geoffrey 2008. ‘A History of the English Lexicon.’ In Momma and Matto (eds.), pp. 69–80.
Hüllen, Werner 2004. A History of Roget’s ‘Thesaurus’: Origins, Development and Design. Oxford University Press.
Hume, David 1983. The History of England: From the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688. 6 vols. Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Classics.
Hunt, Theodore W. 1989. ‘“The Place of English in the College Curriculum”, PMLA (1884–5).’ In Graff and Warner (eds.), pp. 38–49.
Inden, Ronald B. 1990. Imagining India. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Ingram, James 1807. An Inaugural Lecture or the Utility of Anglo-Saxon Literature: To which is Added the Geography of Europe by King Alfred, including his Account of the Discovery of the North Cape in the Ninth Century. OxfordUniversity Press.
Jakobson, Roman 1966. ‘Henry Sweet’s Paths Toward Phonemics.’ In C. E. Bazell, J. C. Catford, M. A. K. Halliday and R. H. Robins (eds.). In Memory of J. R. Firth. London: Longmans, Green and Co., pp. 242–54.
Janda, Richard, et al. 1982. ‘Discussion.’ In Anders Ahlqvist (ed.). Papers from the 5th International Conference on Historical Linguistics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, pp. 442–59.
Jefferson, Thomas 1851. An Essay towards Facilitating Instruction in the Anglo-Saxon and Modern Dialects of the English Language for the Use of the University of Virginia. New York: John F. Trow.
Jespersen, Otto 1922. Language: Its Nature, Development and Origin. New York: Macmillan.
John of Salisbury 2009. The Metalogicon of John of Salisbury: A Twelfth-century Defense of the Verbal and Logical Arts of the Trivium. Daniel D. McGarry (trans.). Philadelphia: Paul Dry Books.
Johnson, Barbara 1990. ‘Philology: What is at Stake?’ In Ziolkowski (ed.) 1990a, pp. 26–30.
Johnson, Samuel 1747. The Plan of a Dictionary of the English Language; Addressed to the Right Honourable Philip Dormer, Earl of Chesterfield; One of his Majesty’s Principal Secretaries of State. London: Printed for J. and P. Knapton, T. Longman and T. Shewell, C. Hitch, A. Millar and R. Dodsley.
Johnson, Samuel 1755. A Dictionary of the English Language: In Which the Words are Deduced from their Originals and Illustrated in their Different Significations by Examples from the Best Writers. 2 vols. London: Printed by W. Strahan, for J. and P. Knapton; T. and T. Longman; C. Hitch and L. Hawes; A. Millar; and R. and J. Dodsley.
Johnson, Samuel 1823. A Dictionary of the English Language, Compiled from Dr. Johnson; with the Addition of Words since Familiarized to Us. London: Printed for Peacock and Bampton.
Jones, Leslie Ellen 2003. J. R. R. Tolkien: A Biography. Westport, CT, and London: Greenwood Press.
Jones, Siân 1997. The Archaeology of Ethnicity: Constructing Identities in the Past and Present. London and New York: Routledge.
Jones, William 1993. The Collected Works of Sir William Jones. Garland Cannon (ed.). 13 vols. New York University Press.
Joy, Eileen A. 2005. ‘Thomas Smith, Humfrey Wanley and the “Little-Known Country” of the Cotton Library.’ The Electronic British Library Journal, pp. 1–34.
Kastovsky, Dieter 1992. ‘Semantics and Vocabulary.’ In Richard M. Hogg (ed.). The Cambridge History of the English Language. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press, pp. 290–408.
Keener, Frederick M. 1991. ‘Pope, The Dunciad, Virgil and the New Historicism of Le Bossu.’ Eighteenth-Century Life 15: 35–57.
Kemble, Frances Ann 1884. Records of a Girlhood. New York: Henry Holt and Company.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1833a. The Anglo-Saxon Poems of ‘Beowulf,’ the ‘Traveller’s Song’ and the ‘Battle of Finnes-burh.’London: William Pickering.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1833b. ‘[Review of] Cædmon’s Metrical Paraphrase … by Benj. Thorpe.’ Gentleman’s Magazine 103: 329–31.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1834a. ‘Analecta Anglo-Saxonica, &c.’ Gentleman’s Magazine, New Series 1: 391–3.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1834b. History of the English Language, first, or Anglo-Saxon Period. Cambridge: Printed for J. & J. J. Deighton.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1834c. ‘Oxford Professors of Anglo-Saxon.’ Gentleman’s Magazine. New Series. 2: 601–5.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1835. [An untitled letter to the editor, dated June 12.] Gentleman’s Magazine. New Series. 4: 26–30.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1837a. ‘Letter to M. Francisque Michel.’ In Francisque Michel. Bibliothèque Anglo-Saxonne. Paris: chez Silvestre, and London: W. Pickering, pp. 1–63.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1837b. ‘Review of Report from the Select Committees on Record Commission (August 1836).’ British and Foreign Review 4: 120–68.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1837c. A Translation of the Anglo-Saxon Poem of ‘Beowulf’, with a Copious Glossary Preface and Philological Notes. London: William Pickering.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1843. The Poetry of the Codex Vercellensis, with an English Translation. London: Printed for the Ælfric Society.
Kemble, John M[itchell] 1981. John Mitchell Kemble’s Review of Jakob Grimm’s ‘Deutsche Grammatik’, Originally Set for the ‘Foreign Quarterly Review’ but Never Published. Old English Newsletter Subsidia 6. Binghamton, NY: Center for Medieval and Early Renaissance Studies.
Kennedy, Arthur G. 1941. ‘Odium Philologicum, or, a Century of Progress in English Philology.’ In Hardin Craig (ed.). Stanford Studies in Language and Literature. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, pp. 11–27.
Kidd, Colin 1996. ‘North Britishness and the Nature of Eighteenth-Century British Patriotisms.’ Historical Journal 39: 361–82.
Kidd, Colin 1999. British Identities before Nationalism: Ethnicity and Nationhood in the Atlantic World, 1600–1800. Cambridge University Press.
Kidd, Colin 2002. ‘Race, Theology and Revival: Scots Philology and Its Contexts in the Age of Pinkerton and Jamieson.’ Scottish Studies Review 3: 20–33.
Knoll, Elizabeth 1986. ‘The Science of Language and the Evolution of Mind: Max Müller’s Quarrel with Darwinism.’ Journal of the House of the Behavioral Sciences 22: 3–22.
Knowles, Elizabeth 2000. ‘Making the OED: Readers and Editors. A Critical Survey.’ In Mugglestone (ed.) 2000a, pp. 22–39.
Koerner, Konrad 1982. ‘Observations on the Sources, Transmission and Meaning of “Indo-European” and Related Terms in the Development of Linguistics.’ In J. Peter Maher, Allan R. Bomhard and E. F. Konrad Koerner (eds.). Papers from the 3rd International Conference on Historical Linguistics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins B.V., pp. 153–80.
Koerner, Konrad 1989. ‘On the Historical Roots of the Philology vs Linguistics Controversy.’ In his Practicing Linguistic Historiography: Selected Essays. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, pp. 233–44.
Kopf, David 1969. British Orientalism and the Bengal Renaissance: The Dynamics of Indian Modernization, 1773–1835. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
Krapp, George Philip and Dobbie, Elliott van Kirk (eds.) 1936. The Exeter Book. New York: Columbia University Press, and London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Kuhn, Thomas S. 1996. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. 3rd edn. University of Chicago Press.
Law, Vivien 1994. ‘The Study of Grammar.’ In Rosamond McKitterick (ed.). Carolingian Culture: Emulation and Innovation. Cambridge University Press, pp. 88–110.
Leavitt, John 2006. ‘Linguistic Relativities.’ In Christine Jourdan and Kevin Tuite (eds.). Language, Culture and Society: Key Topics in Linguistic Anthropology. Cambridge University Press, pp. 47–81.
Leerssen, J. 1986. ‘On the Edge of Europe: Ireland in Search of Oriental Roots, 1650–1850.’ Comparative Criticism 8: 91–112.
Leerssen, J. 1997. Remembrance and Imagination: Patterns in the Historical and Literary Representation of Ireland in the Nineteenth Century. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.
Leff, Michel C. and Loewe, Drew M. 2008. ‘Saint Augustine and Martianus Capella: Continuity and Change in Fifth-Century Latin Rhetorical Theory.’ In Richard Leo Enos et al. (eds.). Rhetoric of St. Augustine of Hippo: ‘De Doctrina Christiana’ and the Search for a Distinctly Christian Rhetoric. Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, pp. 235–46.
Lennon, Joseph 2004. Irish Orientalism: A Literary and Intellectual History. Syracuse University Press.
Leopold, Joan 1970. ‘The Aryan Theory of Race.’ Indian Economic and Social History Review 7: 271–97.
Leopold, Joan 1974. ‘British Applications of the Aryan Theory of Race to India, 1850–1870.’ English Historical Review 89: 578–603.
Leopold, Joan 1987. ‘Ethnic Stereotypes in Linguistics: The Case of Friedrich Max Müller (1847–51).’ In Hans Aarsleff, Louis G. Kelly and Hans-Josef Niederehe (eds.). Papers in the History of Linguistics, Proceedings of the Third International Conference on the History of the Language Sciences (ICHoLS III), Princeton, 19–23 August 1984. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, pp. 501–12.
Lerer, Seth (ed.) 1996. Literary History and the Challenge of Philology: The Legacy of Erich Auerbach. Stanford University Press.
Lerer, Seth 2002a. Error and the Academic Self: The Scholarly Imagination, Medieval to Modern. New York: Columbia University Press.
Lerer, Seth 2002b. ‘Philology and Criticism at Yale.’ Journal of Aesthetic Education 36: 16–25.
Lewis, Carlton T. and Short, Charles. 1907. A New Latin Dictionary, Founded on the Translation of Freund’s Latin-German Lexicon, edited by E. A. Andrews. New York, Cincinnati and Chicago: American Book Company.
Liddell, Henry George and Scott, Robert (eds.) 1996. A Greek-English Lexicon, revised and augmented by Henry Stuart Jones, with the assistance of Roderick McKenzie. With a revised supplement. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Ludden, David 2008. ‘Orientalist Empiricism: Transformations of Colonial Knowledge.’ In Burke and Prochaska (eds.), pp. 75–101.
Lynch, Jack 2000. ‘“The Ground-work of Stile”: Johnson on the History of the Language.’ Studies in Philology 97: 454–72.
Lynch, Jack and McDermott, Anne (eds.) 2005. Anniversary Essays on Johnson’s ‘Dictionary’. Cambridge University Press.
Macaulay, Thomas Babington 1999. ‘Minute Recorded in the General Department by Thomas Babington Macaulay, Law Member of the Governor-general’s Council, dated 2 February 1835.’ In Zastoupil and Moir (eds.), pp. 161–73.
MacMahon, M. K. C. 2004. ‘Sweet, Henry (1845–1912).’ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
Madden, Frederic 1847. La3amons Brut, or Chronicle of Britain; A Poetical Semi-Saxon Paraphrase of the Brut of Wace. 3 vols. London: Published by the Society of Antiquaries of London.
Majeed, Javed 1992. Ungoverned Imaginings: James Mill’s ‘The History of British India’ and Orientalism. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Mallory, J. P. 1973. ‘A History of the Indo-European Problem.’ Journal of Indo-European Studies 1: 21–65.
Mallory, J. P. 1989. In Search of the Indo-Europeans: Language, Archaeology and Myth. New York: Thames and Hudson.
March, Francis A. 1989. ‘“Recollections of Language Teaching”, PMLA (1893).’ In Graff and Warner (eds.), pp. 25–7.
Martineau, Russell 1867. ‘Obituary of Franz Bopp.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 12: 305–12.
Matthews, David 1999. The Making of Middle English, 1765–1910. Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press.
McCrum, Robert, Cran, William and MacNeil, Robert 2002. The Story of English. 3rd rev. edn. London: Penguin.
McDermott, Anne 2005. ‘Johnson the Prescriptivist? The Case for the Defense.’ In Lynch and McDermott (eds.), pp. 113–28.
McGann, Jerome J. (ed.). 2002. The New Oxford Book of Romantic Period Verse. Oxford University Press.
McKitterick, Rosamond 2008. Charlemagne: The Formation of a European Identity. Cambridge University Press.
McNeil, Kenneth 2007. Scotland, Britain, Empire: Writing the Highlands, 1760–1860. Columbus: Ohio State University Press.
Metcalf, George J. 1974. ‘The Indo-European Hypothesis in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.’ In Dell Hymes (ed.). Studies in the History of Linguistics: Traditions and Paradigms. Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press, pp. 233–57.
Mill, James 1968. The History of British India; notes by Horace Hayman Wilson, Introduction by John Kenneth Galbraith. 6 vols. New York: Chelsea Press.
Modern Language Association of America 1885. Modern Language Association of America, Proceedings at New York, December 29, 30, 1884.
Momma, Haruko 1999. ‘A Man on the Cusp: Sir William Jones’s “Philology” and “Oriental Studies”.’ Texas Studies in Literature and Language 41: 160–79.
Momma, Haruko and Matto, Michael (eds.) 2008. A Companion to the History of the English Language. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
Mommsen, Theodor E. 1942. ‘Petrarch’s Conception of the “Dark Ages”.’ Speculum 17: 226–42.
Morris, Richard 1868. Old English Homilies and Homiletic Treatises (Sawles Warde, and þe Wohunge of Ure Lauerd: Ureisuns of Ure Louerd and of Ure Lefdi, &c.) of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries, edited from MSS. in the British Museum, Lambeth and Bodleian Libraries; with Introduction, Translation and Notes. London: Published for the Early English Text Society, by N. Trübner.
Morris, Richard 1875–6. ‘Fourth Annual Address of the President to the Philological Society, Delivered at the Anniversary Meeting, Friday, the 21st of May, 1875.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 16: 1–142.
Mugglestone, Lynda 1993. ‘Shaw, Subjective Inequality and the Social Meanings of Language in Pygmalion.’ Review of English Studies 44: 373–85.
Mugglestone, Lynda (ed.) 2000a. Lexicography and the ‘OED’: Pioneers in the Untrodden Forest. Oxford University Press.
Mugglestone, Lynda 2000b. ‘“Pioneers in the Untrodden Forest”: The New English Dictionary.’ In Mugglestone (ed.) 2000a, pp. 1–21.
Mugglestone, Lynda 2005. Lost for Words: The Hidden History of the ‘Oxford English Dictionary’. New Haven, CT, and London: Yale University Press.
Mugglestone, Lynda 2008. ‘The Rise of Received Pronunciation.’ In Momma and Matto (eds.), pp. 243–50.
Mugglestone, Lynda 2009. ‘The Oxford English Dictionary’. In Cowie (ed.), i: 230–59.
Mukherjee, S. N. 1987. Sir William Jones: A Study in Eighteenth-century British Attitudes to India. 2nd edn. London: Sangam.
Mulcaster, Richard 1582. The First Part of the Elementarie, Vvhich Entreateth Chefelie of the Right Writing of our English Tung. Imprinted at London by Thomas Vautroullier Dwelling in the Blak-friers by Lud-gate.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1848. ‘On the Relation of the Bengali to the Arian and Aboriginal Languages of India.’ In Chevalier Bunsen, Dr. Charles Meyer and Dr. Max Müller. Three Linguistic Dissertations Read at the Meeting of the British Association in Oxford. London: Printed by Richard and John E. Taylor, pp. 319–50.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1851. ‘[A Review of] A Comparative Grammar of the Sanskrit, Zend, Greek, Latin, Lithuanian, Gothic, German and Sclavonic Languages. By Professor F. Bopp.’ Edinburgh Review 192: 151–73.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1854a. ‘The Last Results of the Researches Respecting the Non-Iranian and Non-Semitic Languages of Asia or Europe, or the Turanian Family of Language.’ In Bunsen (ed.), i: 263–521.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1854b. ‘The Last Results of the Sanskrit Researches in Comparative Philology.’ In Bunsen (ed.), i: 128–42.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1854c. Proposals for a Missionary Alphabet, Submitted to the Alphabetical Conferences Held at the Residence of Chevalier Bunsen in January 1854. London: Printed by A. and G. A. Spottiswoode.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1855. The Languages of the Seat of War in the East, with a Survey of the Three Families of Language, Semitic, Arian and Turanian. 2nd edn, with an appendix on the missionary alphabet, and an ethnological map, drawn by Augustus Petermann. London: Williams and Norgate.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1859. A History of Ancient Sanskrit Literature, so far as it Illustrates the Primitive Religion of the Brahmans. London and Edinburgh: Williams and Norgate.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1861. Lectures on the Science of Language, Delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain, in April, May and June, 1861. London: Longman, Green, Longman and Roberts.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1864. Lectures on the Science of Language, Delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain, in February, March, April and May, 1863. Second series, with thirty-one woodcuts. London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts and Green.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1867–75a. ‘Bunsen.’ In Müller 1867–75b, iii: 358–405.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1867–75b. Chips from a German Workshop. 4 vols. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1867–75c. ‘On the Results of the Science of Language: Inaugural Lecture, Delivered in the Imperial University of Strassburg, May 23, 1872.’ In Müller 1867–75b, iv: 210–50.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1867–75d. ‘Preface.’ In Müller 1867–75b, i: vii–xxxiii.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1873a. ‘Lectures on Mr. Darwin’s Philosophy of Language, first lecture.’ Fraser’s Magazine 7: 525–41.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1873b. ‘Lectures on Mr. Darwin’s Philosophy of Language, second lecture.’ Fraser’s Magazine 7: 659–78.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1873c. ‘Lectures on Mr. Darwin’s Philosophy of Language, third lecture.’ Fraser’s Magazine 8: 1–24.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1883. India: What Can It Teach Us?: A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University of Cambridge. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1898. Auld Lang Syne. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1901. My Autobiography: A Fragment. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons.
Müller, Friedrich Max 1902. The Life and Letters of the Right Honourable Friedrich Max Müller, edited by his wife [Georgina Adelaide Müller]. 2 vols. London, New York and Bombay: Longmans, Green and Co.
Murphy, Michael 1982. ‘Antiquary to Academic: The Progress of Anglo-Saxon Scholarship.’ In Berkhout and Gatch (eds.), pp. 1–17.
Murray, K. M. Elisabeth 1977. Caught in the Web of Words: James Murray and the Oxford English Dictionary. New Haven, CT, and London: Yale University Press.
Murray, James A. H. 1873. The Dialect of the Southern Counties of Scotland: Its Pronunciation, Grammar and Historical Relations. London: Published for the Philological Society by Asher & Co.
Murray, James A. H. 1880–1. ‘Ninth Annual Address of the President to the Philological Society, Delivered at the Anniversary Meeting, Friday, 21st of May, 1880.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 18: 117–75.
Murray, James A. H. 1888a. ‘General Explanations.’ In Murray, et al. 1888–1928, i: xvii–xxvi.
Murray, James A. H. 1888b. ‘Preface to Volume i.’ In Murray, et al. 1888–1928, i: v–xvi.
Murray, James A. H. 1890. ‘English Language.’ The Encyclopædia Britannica, A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and General Literature. 9th edn. Complete reprint. New York: Henry G. Allen Company, viii: 390–402
Murray, James A. H. 1970. The Evolution of English Lexicography. College Park, MD: McGrath.
Murray, James A. H., et al. 1888–1928. A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles; Founded Mainly on the Materials Collected by the Philological Society. 10 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Murray, James A. H., 1933. The Oxford English Dictionary being a Corrected Re-issue with an Introduction, Supplement and Bibliography of ‘A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles’.12 vols. with one-volume Supplement. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
My Fair Lady 1964. Dir. George Kukor. Perf. Audrey Hepburn, Rex Harrison, Stanley Holloway and Gladys Cooper. USA: Warner Bros.
Nagy, Gregory 1990. ‘Death of a Schoolboy: The Early Greek Beginnings of a Crisis in Philology.’ In Ziolkowski (ed.) 1990a, pp. 37–48.
Nagy, Gregory 1992. ‘The 1991 Presidential Address, Chicago, Illinois: Homeric Questions.’ Transactions of the American Philological Association 122: 17–60.
Nevalainen, Terttu 1999. ‘Early Modern English Lexis and Semantics.’ In Roger Lass (ed.). The Cambridge History of the English Language. Volume iii. Cambridge University Press, pp. 332–458.
Newmeyer, Frederick J. 1980. Linguistic Theory in America: The First Quarter-Century of Transformational Generative Grammar. New York: Academic Press.
Newton-De Molina, David 1972. ‘Sir William Jones’ “Essay on the Arts Commonly Called Imitative” (1772).’ Anglia 90: 147–54.
Nichols, Stephen G. 1990. ‘Introduction: Philology in a Manuscript Culture.’ Speculum 65: 1–10.
Olender, Maurice 2008. The Languages of Paradise: Race, Religion and Philology in the Nineteenth Century. Arthur Goldhammer (trans.). Cambridge, MA, and London: Harvard University Press.
Olsen, Stein Haugom 2005. ‘Progress in Literary Studies.’ New Literary History 36: 341–58.
Onions, C. T. 1927. ‘Henry Sweet.’ In H. W. C. Davis and J. R. H. Weaver (eds.). The Dictionary of National Biography, 1912–21. Oxford University Press, pp. 519–20.
Orton, Harold 2004. ‘Wyld, Henry Cecil Kennedy (1870–1945).’ John D. Haigh (rev.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
Osselton, Noel 2000. ‘Murray and his European Counterparts.’ In Mugglestone (ed.) 2000a, pp. 59–76.
Osselton, Noel 2005. ‘Hyphenated Compounds in Johnson’s Dictionary.’ In Lynch and McDermott (eds.), pp. 160–74.
Osthoff, Hermann and Brugmann, Karl 1967. ‘Preface to Morphological Investigations in the Sphere of the Indo-European Languages 1.’ In Winfred P. Lehmann (ed. and trans.). A Reader in Nineteenth-Century Historical Indo-European Linguistics. Bloomington, IN, and London: Indiana University Press, pp. 197–209.
Paden, William D. (ed.). 1994. The Future of the Middle Ages: Medieval Literature in the 1990s. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
Padley, G. A. 1985–8. Grammatical Theory in Western Europe, 1500–1700. 2 vols. Cambridge University Press.
Palmer, D. J. 1965. The Rise of English Studies: An Account of the Study of English Language and Literature from its Origins to the Making of the Oxford English School. London, New York and Toronto: Oxford University Press.
Patterson, Lee 1990. ‘On the Margin: Postmodernism, Ironic History and Medieval Studies.’ Speculum 65: 87–108.
Pedersen, Holger 1931. The Discovery of Language: Linguistic Science in the Nineteenth Century. John Webster Spargo (trans.). Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Percy, Thomas 1847. Northern Antiquities; or, an Historical Account of the Manners, Customs, Religion and Laws, Maritime Expeditions and Discoveries, Language and Literature of the Ancient Scandinavians, (Danes, Swedes, Norwegians and Icelanders) with incidental notices respecting our Saxon Ancestors. New edn, revised throughout, and considerably enlarged; with a translation of the prose Edda from the original Old Norse text; and notes critical and explanatory, by I. A. Blackwell, to which is added an Abstract of the Eyrbyggja saga, by Sir Walter Scott. London: Henry G. Bohn.
Pfeiffer, Rudolf 1968. History of Classical Scholarship: From the Beginnings to the End of the Hellenistic Age. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Pfeiffer, Rudolf[Philological Society] 1859. Proposal for the Publication of a New English Dictionary. London: Trübner and Co.
Pinto, V. de Sola 1943–6. ‘Sir William Jones and English Literature.’ Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London) 11: 686–94.
Pokorny, Julius 1959. Indogermanisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch. Bern and Munich: Francke Verlag.
Pollock, Sheldon 2009. ‘Future Philology? The Fate of a Soft Science in a Hard World.’ Critical Inquiry 35: 931–63.
Poovey, Mary 2004. ‘The Limits of the Universal Knowledge Project: British India and the East Indiamen.’ Critical Inquiry 31: 183–202.
Pottle, Frederick A. 1978. ‘A Method for Teaching.’ Wordsworth Circle 9: 325–30.
Prasad, G. J. V. 2006. ‘A Minute Stretching into Centuries: Macaulay, English and India.’ Nineteenth-Century Prose 33: 175–96.
Prichard, James Cowles 1831. The Eastern Origin of the Celtic Nations, Proved by a Comparison of their Dialects with the Sanskrit, Greek, Latin and Teutonic Languages, Forming a Supplement to Researches into the Physical History of Mankind. Oxford: Printed by S. Collingwood, Printer to the University, for J. and A. Arch.
Quirk, Randolph and Wrenn, C. L. 1994. An Old English Grammar. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press.
Rask, Rasmus Kristian 1993. Investigation of the Origin of the Old Norse or Icelandic Language. Niels Ege (trans.). Copenhagen: The Linguistic Circle of Copenhagen.
Reddick, Allen 1996. The Making of Johnson’s ‘Dictionary’, 1746–1773. Rev. edn. Cambridge University Press.
Reddick, Allen 2009. ‘Johnson and Richardson.’ In Cowie (ed.), i: 155–81.
Renna, Thomas 1989. ‘Jerome, St.’ In the Dictionary of the Middle Ages. Joseph R. Strayer (ed.). 13 vols. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, xii: 57–8.
Restall, Matthew 2003. ‘A History of the New Philology and the New Philology in History.’ Latin American Research Review 38: 113–34.
Reynolds, Susan 1985. ‘What do we Mean by “Anglo-Saxon” and “Anglo-Saxons”?’ Journal of British Studies 24: 395–414.
Richardson, Charles 1837–8. A New Dictionary of the English Language. 2 vols. London: William Pickering, and New York: William Jackson.
Roberts, Jane 2009. ‘On the Disappearance of Old English.’ In Roberts, et al., pp. 12–44.
Roberts, Jane, Stanley, Eric, Shippey, Tom and Carver, Martin 2009. The Kemble Lectures on Anglo-Saxon Studies, 2005–8. Alice Jorgensen, Helen Conrad-O’Briain and John Scattergood (eds.). Dublin: School of English, Trinity College.
Robins, R. H. 1978. ‘The Neogrammarians and their Nineteenth-Century Predecessors.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 76: 1–16.
Robins, R. H. 1997. A Short History of Linguistics. 4th edn. London and New York: Longman.
Robinson, Fred C. 1984. ‘Medieval, the Middle Ages.’Speculum 59: 745–56.
Rocher, Rosane 1995. ‘Weaving Knowledge: Sir William Jones and Indian Pandits.’ In Garland Cannon and Kevin R. Brine (eds.). Objects of Enquiry: The Life, Contributions and Influences of Sir William Jones (1764–1794). New York University Press, pp. 51–79.
Rosso, Stefano 1986. ‘An Interview with Paul de Man.’ In de Man 1986a, pp. 115–21.
Russell, David R. 2002. ‘Institutionalizing English: Rhetoric on the Boundaries.’ In David R. Shumway and Craig Dionne (eds.). Disciplining English: Alternative Histories, Critical Perspectives. Albany: State University of New York Press, pp. 39–58.
Said, Edward W. 1979. Orientalism. New York: Vintage.
Said, Edward W. 2004. Humanism and Democratic Criticism. New York: Columbia University Press.
Sanders, Carol (ed.) 2004. The Cambridge Companion to Saussure. Cambridge University Press.
Sandys, John Edwin 1903–8. A History of Classical Scholarship. 3 vols. CambridgeUniversity Press.
Sartori, Andrew 2006. ‘The British Empire and Its Liberal Mission.’ Journal of Modern History 78: 623–42.
Saussure, Ferdinand de 1986. Course in General Linguistics. Charles Bally and Albert Sechehaye (eds.). With the collaboration of Albert Riedlinger. Roy Harris (trans.). La Salle, IL: Open Court.
Scheler, Manfred 1977. Der englische Wortschatz. Berlin: Erich Schmidt Verlag.
Schestag, Thomas 2007. ‘Philology, Knowledge.’ Telos 140: 28–44.
Schlegel, Friedrich 1822–5. ‘Recension der Schrift von Rhode: Ueber den Anfang unserer Geschichte und die letzte Revolution der Erde. Breslau 1819.’ In his Sämmtliche Werke. Wien: J. Mayer, x: 267–356.
Schlegel, Friedrich 1849. On the Language and Wisdom of the Indians. In his The Æsthetic and Miscellaneous Works of Frederick von Schlegel. E. J. Millington (trans.). London: Henry G. Bohn, pp. 425–526.
Schlegel, Friedrich 1977. Über die Sprache und die Weisheit der Indier: ein Beitrag zur Begründung der Altertumskunde. E. F. K. Koerner (ed.). Amsterdam: John Benjamins B. V.
Schwab, Raymond 1984. The Oriental Renaissance: Europe’s Rediscovery of India and the East, 1680–1880. Gene Patterson-Black and Victor Reinking (trans.). New York: Columbia University Press.
Scott, Walter 1998. Ivanhoe. Graham Tulloch (ed.). Edinburgh University Press.
Sebeok, Thomas A. (ed.) 1966. Portraits of Linguists: A Biographical Source Book for the History of Western Linguistics, 1746–1963. 2 vols. Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press.
Seuren, Pieter A. M. 1998. Western Linguistics: An Historical Introduction. Malden, MA, and Oxford: Blackwell.
Shapiro, Fred R. 1981. ‘On the Origin of the Term “Indo-Germanic”.’ Historiographia Linguistica 8: 165–70.
Shaw, Bernard 2000. Pygmalion, A Romance in Five Acts. London: Penguin.
Shippey, Tom 2003. The Road to Middle-earth. Rev. and expanded edn. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company.
Shippey, Tom 2009. ‘Kemble, Beowulf and the Schleswig-Holstein Question.’ In Roberts, et al., pp. 64–80.
Shore, John (Lord Teignmouth) 1993a. ‘A Discourse Delivered at a Meeting of the Asiatick Society, in Calcutta, on the Twenty-Second of May, 1794.’ In W. Jones 1993, iii: iii–xxi.
Shore, John 1993b. ‘Memoirs of the Life, Writings and Correspondence, of Sir William Jones.’ In W. Jones 1993, i: iii–409 and ii: 1–514.
Siegert, Hans 1941–2. ‘Zur Geschichte der Begriffe “Arier” und “arish”.’ Wörter und Sachen: Zeitschrift für indogermanische Sprachwissenschaft, Volksforschung und Kulturgeschichte 22, n. f. 4: 73–99.
Silva, Penny 2005. ‘Johnson and the OED.’ International Journal of Lexicography 18: 231–42.
Simon, Eckehard 1990. ‘The Case for Medieval Philology.’ In Ziolkowski (ed.) 1990a, pp. 16–20.
Simpson, J. A. and Weiner, E. S. C. 1989. The Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd edn. 20 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Simpson, John (ed.) 2000–. The Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd edn. OED Online. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sitter, Zak 2008. ‘William Jones, “Eastern” Poetry and the Problem of Imitation.’ Texas Studies in Literature and Language 50: 385–407.
Sorensen, Janet 2000. The Grammar of Empire in Eighteenth-Century British Writing. Cambridge University Press.
Stahl, William Harris and Johnson, Richard with E. L. Burge 1971–7. Martianus Capella and the Seven Liberal Arts. 2 vols. New York: Columbia University Press.
Stanley, E. G. 1995. ‘Old English = “Anglo-Saxon”: The Modern Sense for the Language Anticipated by Archbishop Matthew Parker in 1567, and by John Strype in 1711, Camden’s Use in Remaines (1605) for the Anglo-Saxon People Noted; Together with Notes on how OED Treats such Terms.’ Notes and Queries 42: 168–71.
Stanley, E. G. 2000. ‘OED and the Earlier History of English.’ In Mugglestone (ed.) 2000a, pp. 126–55.
Stock, Brian 1969. ‘The Poverty of Philology: The Need for New Directions in Classics and Medieval Studies.’ ACLS Newsletter 20: 1–7.
Strabone, Jeff 2008. ‘Grammarians and Barbarians: How the Vernacular Revival Transformed British Literature and Identity in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries.’ Unpublished PhD dissertation. New York University.
Strabone, Jeff 2010. ‘Samuel Johnson: Standardizer of English, Preserver of Gaelic.’ ELH: English Literary History 77: 237–65.
Stray, Christopher 2004. ‘Key, Thomas Hewitt (1799–1875).’ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
Sturtevant, Edgar H. 1966. ‘Leonard Bloomfield (1887–1949).’ In Sebeok (ed.), ii: 518–21.
Sutherland, J. C. C. 1999a. ‘Letter from J. C. C. Sutherland, Secretary to the General Committee to Public Instruction, to H. T. Prinsep, Secretary to the Government of India in the General Department, Dated 21 January 1835.’ In Zastoupil and Moir (eds.), pp. 130–46.
Sutherland, J. C. C. 1999b. ‘Letter from J. C. C. Sutherland, Secretary to the General Committee to Public Instruction, to H. T. Prinsep, Secretary to the Government of India in the General Department, Dated 22 January 1835.’ In Zastoupil and Moir (eds.), pp. 147–60.
Swain, Simon 1996. Hellenism and Empire: Language, Classicism and Power in the Greek World ad 50–250. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sweet, Henry 1868–9. ‘The History of the TH in English.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 13: 272–88.
Sweet, Henry 1870. ‘A Criticism on Prof. Koch’s Papers on A. S. EA and EÂ.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 14: 1–4.
Sweet, Henry 1871–2. King Alfred’s West-Saxon Version of Gregory’s ‘Pastoral Care’, with an English translation, the Latin texts, notes and an introduction. London: Published for the Early English Text Society, by N. Trübner & Co.
Sweet, Henry 1873–4. ‘Germanic and Scandinavian.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 15: 439–46.
Sweet, Henry 1874. A History of English Sounds, Including an Investigation of the General Laws of Sound Change, and Full Word Lists (from the ‘Transactions of the Philological Society’ for 1873–4). London: Published for the English Dialect Society by Trübner.
Sweet, Henry 1875–6. ‘Words, Logic and Grammar.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 16: 470–503.
Sweet, Henry 1876. An Anglo-Saxon Reader in Prose and Verse, with Grammatical Introduction, Notes and Glossary. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sweet, Henry 1877–9a. ‘Seventh Annual Address of the President, to the Philological Society, Delivered at the Anniversary Meeting, Friday, 17th May, 1878.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 17: 373–455.
Sweet, Henry 1877–9b. ‘Sixth Annual Address of the President to the Philological Society, Delivered at the Anniversary Meeting, Friday, the 18th of May, 1877.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 17: 1–122.
Sweet, Henry 1882–4a. ‘The Practical Study of Language.’Transactions of the Philological Society 19: 577–99.
Sweet, Henry 1882–4b. ‘Report on General Philology.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 19: 105–15.
Sweet, Henry 1884. An Anglo-Saxon Reader, in Prose and Verse with Grammatical Introduction, Notes and Glossary. 4th edn, revised and enlarged. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sweet, Henry 1885. The Oldest English Texts. London: Published for the Early English Text Society by N. Trübner & Co.
Sweet, Henry 1886a. ‘An English School at Oxford, London: Jan. 14, 1886.’ Academy 716: 61.
Sweet, Henry 1886b. ‘An English School at Oxford, London: Jan. 23, 1886.’ Academy 717: 76–7.
Sweet, Henry 1886c. ‘The Oxford Chair of English, London: Feb. 15, 1886.’ Academy 720: 131–2.
Sweet, Henry 1888. A History of English Sounds from the Earliest Period, with Full Word-lists. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sweet, Henry 1890. A Primer of Spoken English. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sweet, Henry 1892. A Manual of Current Shorthand, Orthographic and Phonetic. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sweet, Henry 1892–8. A New English Grammar, Logical and Historical. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sweet, Henry 1894. An Anglo-Saxon Reader, in Prose and Verse with Grammar, Metre, Notes and Glossary. 7th edn, enlarged and partly rewritten. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sweet, Henry 1900. The History of Language. New York: Macmillan.
Sweet, Henry 1900–1. ‘Linguistic Affinity.’ Otia Merseiana 2: 113–26.
Swift, J. 1712. A Proposal for Correcting, Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue; in a Letter to the Most Honourable Robert Earl of Oxford and Mortimer, Lord High Treasurer of Great Britain. 2nd edn. London: Printed for Benj. Tooke.
Tennyson, Alfred 1991. Poems, Chiefly Lyrical, 1830. Oxford and New York: Woodstock Books.
Thackeray, William Makepeace 1989. Vanity Fair: A Novel without a Hero. Peter L. Shillingsburg (ed.), with commentary by Nicholas Pickwoad and Robert Colby. New York and London: Garland Publishing.
Thomas, Richard F. 1990. ‘Past and Future in Classical Philology.’ In Ziolkowski 1990a, pp. 66–74.
Thornbury, Emily V. 2006. ‘Admiring the Ruined Text: The Picturesque in Editions of Old English Verse.’ New Medieval Literatures 8: 215–44.
Thorpe, B[enjamin]. 1830. A Grammar of the Anglo-Saxon Tongue, with a Praxis, by Erasmus Rask. A new edn, enlarged and improved by the author. Copenhagen: Printed by S. L. Møller.
Thorpe, B[enjamin] 1832. Cædmon’s Metrical Paraphrase of Parts of the Holy Scriptures, in Anglo-Saxon; with an English Translation, Notes and a Verbal Index. London: Published by the Society of Antiquaries of London.
Thorpe, B[enjamin] 1834. Analecta Anglo-Saxonica, a Selection, in Prose and Verse, from Anglo-Saxon Authors of Various Ages; with a Glossary. London: John and Arthur Arch.
Thorpe, B[enjamin] 1865. A Grammar of the Anglo-Saxon Tongue, from the Danish of Erasmus Rask. Second edn, corrected and improved. London: Trübner & Co.
Tillyard, E. M. W. 1958. The Muse Unchained: An Intimate Account of the Revolution in English Studies at Cambridge. London: Bowes and Bowes.
Tolkien, J. R. R. 1923. ‘Philology: General Works.’ Year’s Work in English Studies 4: 20–37.
Tolkien, J. R. R. 1930. ‘The Oxford English School.’ Oxford Magazine 48: 778–82.
Tolkien, J. R. R. 1936. ‘Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics.’ Proceedings of the British Academy, 245–95.
Trautmann, Thomas R. 1997. Aryans and British India. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press.
Trench, Richard Chenevix 1855. English Past and Present. New York: Redfield.
Trench, Richard Chenevix 1860. On Some Deficiencies in Our English Dictionaries, Being the Substance of Two Papers Read before the Philological Society, Nov. 5, and Nov. 19, 1857. 2nd edn, revised and enlarged. London: John W. Parker & Sons.
Trench, Richard Chenevix 1905. On the Study of Words. Edited with emendations by A. Smythe Palmer. London: George Routledge and Sons.
Trench, Richard Chenevix 1958. Dictionary of Obsolete English. New York: Philosophical Library.
[Trench, Richard Chenevix, et al.] 1860. Canones Lexicographici; or Rules to be Observed in Editing the New English Dictionary of the Philological Society. London: Philological Society. Reprinted in Transactions of the Philological Society 1857: Part 2, number 3: 1–12.
Turley, Richard Marggraf 2002. The Politics of Language in Romantic Literature. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Turner, Sharon 1805. The History of the Manners, Landed Property, Government, Laws, Poetry, Literature, Religion and Language, of the Anglo-Saxons. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme.
Turner, Sharon 1839. ‘Preface to the Third Edition.’ In his The History of England: From the Earliest Period to the Death of Elizabeth. London: Printed for Longman, Orme, Brown, Green and Longmans, i: v–viii.
Tyrwhitt, Thomas 1782. ‘An Essay on the Language and Versificat[ion] of Chaucer.’ In his The Poetical Works of Geoff. Chaucer. 14 vols. Edinburgh: At the Apollo Press, by the Martins, i: xciv–clxx.
Vasunia, Phiroze 2001. The Gift of the Nile: Hellenizing Egypt from Aeschylus to Alexander. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Veblen, Thorstein 2007. The Theory of the Leisure Class, ed. with an introduction and notes by Martha Banta. Oxford University Press.
Verburg, P. A. 1949–50. ‘The Background to the Linguistic Conceptions of Bopp.’ Lingua 2: 438–68.
Vernon, Edward Johnston 1846. A Guide to the Anglo-Saxon Tongue: A Grammar after Erasmus Rask, Extracts in Prose and Verse, with Notes, etc. for the Use of Learners, and an Appendix. London: John Russell Smith.
Viswanathan, Gauri 1989. Masks of Conquest: Literary Study and British Rule in India. New York: Columbia University Press.
Wanley, Humfrey 1705. Antiquæ Literaturæ Septentrionalis Liber Alter, seu Humphredi Wanleii Librorum Vett. Septentrionalium, qui in ‘Angliæ’ Bibliothecis extant, nec non multorum ‘Vett’ Codd. Septentrionalium alibi extantium Catalogus Historico-Criticus, cum totius Thesauri Linguarum Septentrionalium sex Indicibus. Oxford: Sheldonian Theatre.
Warton, Thomas 1775. The History of English Poetry, from the Close of the Eleventh to the Commencement of the Eighteenth Century. 2nd edn. 4 vols. London: printed for, and sold by, J. Dodsley; J. Walter; T. Becket; J. Robson; G. Robinson, and J. Bew; and Messrs. Fletcher.
Watkins, Calvert 1990. ‘What is Philology?’ In Ziolkowski (ed.) 1990a, pp. 21–5.
Watkins, Calvert 1998. ‘Proto-Indo-European: Comparison and Reconstruction.’ In Anna Giacalone Ramat and Paolo Ramat (eds.). The Indo-European Languages. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 25–73.
Watt, James 2004. ‘Scott, the Scottish Enlightenment and Romantic Orientalism.’ In Leith Davis, Ian Duncan and Janet Sorensen (eds.). Scotland and the Borders of Romanticism. Cambridge University Press, pp. 94–112.
Watts, T. 1850. ‘On the Probable Future Position of the English Language.’ Proceedings of the Philological Society 4: 207–14.
Wheatley, Henry B. 1865. ‘Chronological Notices of the Dictionaries of the English Language.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 10: 218–93.
Whitney, William Dwight 1867. Language and the Study of Language: Twelve Lectures on the Principles of Linguisitic Science. London: N. Trübner & Co.
Whitney, William Dwight 1892. Max Müller and the Science of Language: A Criticism. New York: D. Appleton and Company.
Wiley, Raymond A. 1971. John Mitchell Kemble and Jakob Grimm: A Correspondence, 1832–1852. Leiden: E. J. Brill.
Wiley, Raymond A. 1979. ‘Anglo-Saxon Kemble: The Life and Works of John Mitchell Kemble, 1807–1857: Philologist, Historian, Archaeologist.’ In Sonia Chadwick Hawkes, David Brown and James Campbell (eds.). Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History, i: 165–273.
Willinsky, John 1994. Empire of Words: The Reign of the OED. Princeton University Press.
Winford, Donald 2008. ‘English in the Caribbean.’ In Momma and Matto (ed.), pp. 413–22.
Winning, W. B. 1838. A Manual of Comparative Philology, in which the Affinity of the Indo-European Languages is Illustrated, and Applied to the Primeval History of Europe, Italy and Rome. London: printed for J. G. & F. Rivington.
Winters, Margaret E. and Nathan, Geoffrey S. 1992. ‘First He Called Her a Philologist and Then She Insulted Him.’ In Diane Brentari, Gary N. Larson, and Lynn A. Macleod (eds.). The Joy of Grammar: A Festschrift in Honor of James D. McCawley. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: Benjamins, pp. 351–67.
Wolf, Kristen 1998. ‘Rasmus Rask (1787–1832).’ In Damico (ed.), pp. 109–24.
Wormald, Patrick 1983. ‘Bede, the Bretwaldas and the Origins of the Gens Anglorum.’ In Patrick Wormald, Donald Bullough and Roger Collins (eds.). Ideal and Reality in Frankish and Anglo-Saxon Society, Studies Presented to J. M. Wallace-Hadrill. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, pp. 99–129.
Wrenn, C. L. 1933. ‘“Standard” Old English.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 32: 65–88.
Wrenn, C. L. 1946. ‘Henry Sweet, Presidential Address Delivered to the Philological Society on Friday, 10th May, 1946.’ Transactions of the Philological Society 45: 177–201.
Wyatt, Jr, William F. 1983. ‘Philology Rediviva.’ Classical World 77: 27–32.
Wyld, Henry Cecil 1901. ‘Henry Sweet.’ Modern Language Quarterly 4: 73–9.
Wyld, Henry Cecil 1913. ‘Henry Sweet.’ Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen 130, n. s. 30: 1–8.
Young, Robert J. C. 2008. The Idea of English Ethnicity. Malden, MA, and Oxford: Blackwell.
Zastoupil, Lynn and Moir, Martin (eds.) 1999. The Great Indian Education Debate: Documents Relating to the Orientalist-Anglicist Controversy, 1781–1843. Richmond, Surrey: Curzon.
Ziolkowski, Jan (ed.) 1990a. On Philology. University Park, PA, and London: Pennsylvania State University Press.
Ziolkowski, Jan 1990b. ‘“What is Philology?” Introduction.’ In Ziolkowski (ed.) 1990a, pp. 1–12.