A selected alphabetical list of international publishers who have produced books on HEL.
Brepols Publishers [Its most recent publications include Richard Dance, Sara Pons-Sanz and Brittany Shorn (eds.), The Legacy of Medieval Scandinavian Encounters With England and the Insular World (2025).]
Cambridge Scholars Publishing [Its most recent publications include Fabienne Toupin, Sylvain Gatelais and Ileana Sasu (eds.), Studies in Linguistic Variation and Change 3: Corpus-based Research in English Syntax and Lexis (2020).]
Cambridge University Press [Its most recent publications include Eva Berlage, Composite Predicates in English: Processes of Specialization (2025).]
De Gruyter Brill [Its most recent publications include Louise Sylvester, Megan Tiddeman, Richard Ingham and Kathryn Allan (eds.), Language Contact and Semantic Development in Late Medieval English (2025).]
Edinburgh University Press [Its most recent publications include Simon Horobin, A History of English Spelling (2025).]
John Benjamins [Its most recent publications include Xinyue Yao, The Present Perfect and the Preterite in Late Modern and Contemporary English: A Corpus-Based Study of Grammatical Change (2024).]
Oxford University Press [Its most recent publications include Rosemarie Ostler, The United States of English: The American Language from Colonial Times to the Twenty-First Century (2023).]
Palgrave Macmillan [Its most recent publications include Justyna Rogos-Hebda, Abbreviating Middle English: Scribal Practices, Visual Texts and Medieval Multimodalities (2025).]
Peter Lang [Its most recent publications include Zeltia Blanco-Suárez, Death-related Intensifiers in the History of English: Grammaticalisation and Related Phenomena (2025).]
Routledge [Its most recent publications include Akinobu Tani, Binomials in Late Middle English to Early Modern English: Style, Frequency and Etymology (2025).]
Uppsala Books [Its most recent publications include Geoffrey Russom, The Syntax of Beowulf: Word Order, Poetic Meter, and Formulaic Technique in the Old English Verse Clause (2025).]
Wiley [Its most recent publications include Richard Dance, Words Derived from Old Norse in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: An Etymological Survey (2019).]