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Books (With Ben Crystal) Shakespeare’s Words (London: Penguin, 2002), xxviii+650 pp. 0 14 100737 0; US edition by Penguin Putnam, 2002; paperback edition with corrections and additions, 2004, xxviii+650 pp. 0 14 029117 2 (With Ben Crystal) The Shakespeare Miscellany (London: Penguin), x+214 pp. 0 140 51555 0 Pronouncing Shakespeare (Cambridge: CUP), xviii+188 pp. 0 521 85213 7 Think on my Words: Exploring Shakespeare's Language (Cambridge: CUP), xii+254 pp. 978 0 521 87694 0 Articles and contributions Weighing up Williamisms. Around the Globe 3 (Spring 1997), 9; reprinted in Modern English Teacher (8:2, 1999), 20-21 What can this cock-pit hold? Around the Globe 4 (Summer 1997), 19; reprinted in Modern English Teacher(8:3, 1999), 15-16 New words? It all-depends. Around the Globe 5 (Autumn 1997), 32; ; reprinted in Modern English Teacher(8:4, 1999), 20-21 Names, names, names. Around the Globe 6 (Winter 1997), 12-13 Verbing. Around the Globe 7 (Spring 1998), 20-21; reprinted in Modern English Teacher 9 (1), 2000, 18-19 Those tricksy words. Around the Globe 8 (Winter 1998), 34-5 Our English dead. Around the Globe 9, 1999, 28-9 Collocating auspiciously. Around the Globe 10, 1999, 34-5; reprinted in e magazine 5 (Sep 1999), 20-21 O, but one word. Around the Globe 11, 1999, 34-5 But one word more. Around the Globe 12, 1999, 18-19 What time is it? Around the Globe 13, 2000, 22-3 Nothing for ages then two at once. Around the Globe 14, 2000, 20-21; reprinted in e magazine 10 (2000), 52-3 Pick a word, any word... Around the Globe 15, 2000, 22-23 Saying what can't be said. Around the Globe 16, 2001, 20-21 Un-finished. Around the Globe 17, 2001, 22-3 Imagination bodies forth. Around the Globe 18, 2001, 28-9 Shakespeare's false friends. Around the Globe 19, 2001, 28-9 Remember thy friends. Around the Globe 20, 2002, 12-13 Shakespeare and lawyers / Glossary. Programme notes for Twelfth Night (Globe Theatre Company, February 2002) 12 items (‘Will’s words’) on Shakespeare's false friends begins in TES Teachers’ Magazine, May 2002 to July 2006, weekly in term time. To modernize or not to modernize: there is no question. Around the Globe 21, 2002, 15-17; adapted as talk for Lingua Franca, 'Does Shakespeare's English need translating?' (Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2003) Catch this. Around the Globe 22, 2002, 14-15 Speak, in the name of the law. Entertainment Law 1(2), 2002, 103-17. Lecture given to the Shakespeare's Globe Education series, 'Shakespeare and the Lawyers', March 2002 Shakespeare's false friends: naughty. e magazine 18, December 2002, 64-5 Have I twice said well? Around the Globe 23, 2003, 10-11 Nick without froth. Around the Globe 23½, 2003, 14 A public count. Around the Globe 24, 2003, 18-19 F for frustrating, E for ennui (review of J. Hope, Shakespeare's Grammar). Around the Globe 25, 2003, 38-9 A third book? Cuesheet (Shakespeare's Globe Newsletter, 2003). [See further, the Sam Wanamaker lecture] Of infinite tongue. Sam Wanamaker lecture (with Ben Crystal), Shakespeare's Globe, 19 March 2003 The language of Shakespeare. In S. Wells and L. Orlin (eds), Shakespeare: an Oxford guide (Oxford: OUP, 2003), 67-78 Shakespeare's words. 24 Hours (Australian Broadcasting Corporation), February 2003, 32-4 Glossary entries adapted from Shakespeare's Words for Twelfth Night programme, Shakespeare's Globe, 2003, 32-3 Shakespeare and ELT. In Alan Pulverness (ed), IATEFL 2003 (Canterbury: IATEFL), 146-60 Shakespeare's false friends: ecstasy. e magazine 20, April 2003, 54-5 Shakespeare's false friends: lover. e magazine 21, September 2003, 45-6 Shakespeare's false friends: rude. e magazine 22, December 2003, 54-5 Shakespeare's false friends: silly. e magazine 23, February 2004, 50-51 Shakespeare's false friends: distracted. e magazine 24, 2004. Being bethumped. Around the Globe 26, 2005, 14-15 Saying it as it was. Around the Globe 27, 2005, 14-15. Reprinted in Speaking English 38 (Spring 2005), 4-6 Listening most precisely on the event. Around the Globe 28, 2004, 25-7. Reprinted in Speaking English 38 (Spring 2005), 7-10 Review of Frank Kermode, The age of Shakespeare, New Statesman, 5 July 2004, 53 The language of Shakespeare. Introductory essay to Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor, The Complete Works (Oxford: OUP, 2005), xlv-lxiv Speaking in deeds. English Drama Media, 4, 2005, 26-9 Well, well, well. Around the Globe 29, 2005, 16-17 I saw eight -ships... Around the Globe 30, 2005, 20-21 Hark, hark, what shout is that?. Around the Globe 31. [based on article written for the Troilus programme, Shakespeare's Globe, August 2005: 'Saying it like it was'] Friends, Romans and Westcountrymen. Times Higher Education Supplement, 6 May 2005, 16-17 Performing the tongue that Shakespeare spoke. Talk for Lingua Franca (Australian Broadcasting Corporation), 12 July 2005 Were you on your auditory mettle? Around the Globe 32, 2006, 32-4 Playing with Latin Around the Globe 33, 2006, 20-21 To be Englished rightly Around the Globe 34, 2006, 26-27 One meaning well suited. Around the Globe 35, 2007, 16-17 Over-read it at your pleasure. Around the Globe 36, 2007, 34-5 Hamlet - the H Quarto. A fantasy in honour of the tenth anniversary of Shakespeares' Globe, 2007 The Shakespearean status of the Danielle poems: some lexical notes. Unpublished paper, 2007 Review of Stanley Wells. Is it true what they say about Shakespeare?, Shakespeare at the Centre (Shakespeare Birthplace Trust), 7(2), 2007, 15 Being boysterous. Around the Globe 37, 2007, 28-9 Where Dull is dull, but Feeble is brave. Review of Laurie Maguire, Shakespeare's Names, Around the Globe 38, 2008, 46-7 Dialecte coach wanted: applye within. Around the Globe 39, 2008, 32-3
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