Special Issues of peer-reviewed journals
3. Roemer, U. & Egbert, J. (Eds.) (2024). Corpus linguistics and the law. Special issue of Applied Corpus Linguistics.
2. Egbert, J., Gray, B., Larsson, T. (Eds.), (2023). Register variation and corpus linguistics: Empirical findings and emerging theories. Papers in honor of Doug Biber. Special issue of Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory.
1. Larsson, T., Staples, S., & Egbert, J. (Eds.) (2022). Teaching, learning, and researching with corpora: Papers in honor of Dr. Randi Reppen. Special issue of Applied Corpus Linguistics, 2(3), 100025.
Book reviews
4. Egbert, J. (2016). Review of the book Linguistic variation in research articles: When discipline tells only part of the story. English for Specific Purposes Journal.
3. Egbert, J. (2015). Review of the book Digital literary studies: Corpus approaches to poetry, prose, and drama. ICAME Journal, 39(1): 152 – 156.
2. Egbert, J. (2014). Review of the book Corpus stylistics and Dickens’s fiction. Corpora, 9(2), 273-276.
1. Egbert, J. (2012). Review of the book Genres on the web: Computational models and empirical studies. Corpora, 7(1), 109 – 112.
Amicus briefs
3. Brief for Thomas R. Lee, Kevin Tobia, and Jesse Egbert as Amici Curiae in Support of Neither Party, The United States Supreme Court in Re. Mark E. Pulsifer v. United States. 2023.
2. Brief for Clark D. Cunningham and Jesse Egbert as Amici Curiae in Support of Neither Party, The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Re. Donald J. Trump on appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland at Greenbelt. 2020.
1. Brief for Clark D. Cunningham and Jesse Egbert as Amici Curiae in Support of Neither Party, The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in Richard Blumenthal et al. v. Donald J. Trump on appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. 2020.
Blog Posts (Linguistics with a Corpus)
https://linguisticswithacorpus.wordpress.com/author/jesseegbert/
10. Egbert, J. (2024). You shall know a word by its context, not its collocates.
9. Egbert, J. (2024). “I tried”: Transparency in reporting methods.
8. Egbert, J. (2023). Linguistics is done by linguists, not by computers.
7. Egbert, J. (2023). Is there a role for theory in corpus linguistics?
6. Egbert, J. (2022). Applying corpus linguistics.
5. Egbert, J. (2021). The most underused article type in corpus linguistics: Short reports on corpora and methods.
4. Egbert, J. (2021). Are our linguistic variables linguistically valid?
3. Egbert, J. (2021). The corpus—a sample by another name.
2. Egbert, J. (2021). Could simpler methods be the way of the future?
1. Egbert, J. (2021). Lexical prominence and the cline of linguistic interpretability.