Contents: Philip Durkin: An Influential Voice in the Germanic Etymologies in the First Edition of the OED: Correspondence Between Early Editors and Eduard Sievers - Antonette diPaolo Healey: Taking hand in Hand: Mapping its Meaning in Old English and Later - Alfred Bammesberger: Two Textual Notes on the Old English Poem Christ I - Andrew James Johnston: Calques and Culture: Revisiting an Issue in Old English Lexical Morphology - Ulrike Krischke: A Glimpse at Anglo-Saxon Biosystematics: The Voice of the Plant Names - Peter Bierbaumer: Research into Old English Plant Names: 1969-2009 - Ferdinand von Mengden: Ablaut or Transfixation? On the Old English Strong Verbs - Eric G. Stanley: Runic Mysteries in Old and Middle English Verse and in Modern Scholarship - Gaby Waxenberger: The Cryptic Runes on the Auzon/Franks Casket: A Challenge for the Runologist and the Lexicographer - Mary Blockley: Speech Acts and Inscriptions: The Syntax of the Right Side of the Auzon/Franks Casket - Lucia Kornexl/Ursula Lenker: Culinary and Other Pairs: Lexical Borrowing and Conceptual Differentiation in Early English Food Terminology - Michiko Ogura: Hap, kappen and happy: Their Borrowing and Development through Rivalry - Rafal Molencki: The Evolution of forward in Medieval English - Oliver M. Traxel: The Katherine Group as a Source for the Reconstruction of Unattested Words from the Old English Period - Claire Fennell: Some Notes on the Vocabulary of Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Rawlinson B 520 - Karl Reichl: Rewth, milthe, merci: Lexical Choices in the Middle English Translations of the Psalms - Hans-Joerg Schmid: Tracing Paths of Conventionalization from the Bible to the BNC: A Concise Corpus-based History of the not that Construction - Inge B. Milfull: Some Notes on the Vocabulary of Hary's Wallace - Manfred Markus: A Glass of Yale: J-Insertion in English Dialects (Based on Joseph Wright's English Dialect Dictionary) - Stefan Thim: On the Phrasal Verbs in Some Paston Letters - Hedwig Gwosdek: The Category of the Adverb in English Grammatical Manuscripts and Early Printed Grammars for the Teaching of Latin (c. 1400 to 1540) - Robert Mailhammer: From ic nolde to I don't wanna: The Status of Clitics in the History of English - Wolfgang Falkner: Then as a Coordinating Adverb or What a Difference a Comma Makes - Ingrid Piller: Airport Language and the Globalization of Nothing - Susanne Handl: Online Access: Collocations in the Electronic Age.