The phonological interpretation of Ancient Greek : a pandialectal analysis /
A historical Greek reader : Mycenaean to the Koiné /
Introduction to Attic Greek : answer key /
The grammar of Attic inscriptions.
Introduction to Attic Greek /
Dialect.
Hellenistic and Roman Greece as a sociolinguistic area /
Ancient Greek : a structural programme /
Expressions of agency in ancient Greek /
English in Cyprus or Cyprus English : an empirical investigation of variety status /
Themes in Greek Linguistics II /
The textualization of the Greek alphabet /
Aspects of Latin American Spanish dialectology : in honor of Terrell A. Morgan /
Themes in Greek linguistics : papers from the first International Conference on Greek Linguistics, Reading, September 1993 /
Advances in Greek generative syntax : in honor of Dimitra Theophanopoulou-Kontou /
Greek poetic syntax in the Classical Age /
Noun Morphology of Modern Demotic Greek : a Descriptive Analysis.
Modern Greek and American English in contact /
The acquisition of the DP in modern Greek /
The structure of complementation /
The emergence of reflexivity in Greek language and thought : from Homer to Plato and beyond /
The language of literature : linguistic approaches to classical texts /
Clause combining in ancient Greek narrative discourse : the distribution of subclauses and participial clauses in Xenophon's Hellenica and Anabasis /
Imaging Aristotle : Verbal and Visual Representation in Fourteenth-Century France /
When dead tongues speak : teaching beginning Greek and Latin /
The emergence of semantics in four linguistic traditions : Hebrew, Sanskrit, Greek, Arabic /
Studies in the language of Homer /
Numbers and numeracy in the Greek polis /
Scholia vetera in Pindari Carmina.
Learning Greek with Plato : a beginner's course in Classical Greek, based on Plato, Meno 70a1-81e6 /
All the Greek Verbs.
Who Were the Greeks?
The literate revolution in Greece and its cultural consequences /
Spoken like a woman : speech and gender in Athenian drama /
Word and image in ancient Greece /
Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects : From Central Greece to the Black Sea.