This study examines gendered linguistic practices in Post-Classical Greek (31 BC–600 AD) by analyzing bidirectional texts, i.e. written exchanges that reflect an interaction between sender and recipient, including documentary letters, ...read more
Medieval cities were more than centers of trade and governance—they were imagined, shaped, and contested through literature. This project examines how Bruges, Ghent, and Ypres were represented in Middle Dutch ...read more
Ancient Greek distinguishes between imperfective and perfective aspect in all moods of the verb, including the imperative mood. Although this is an rare feature typologically, we still only have a ...read more
Scholarship on the no-self (anātman) doctrine in Buddhism has predominantly focused on the Indian context, often overlooking significant variations within the history of Chinese Buddhism. This may due to scholars’ ...read more
In the decades leading up to passage of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1920 granting American women the vote, three Norwegian immigrants had surprising roles in ...read more
Effective writing skills are essential to succeed in professional and academic settings. In Flanders, highly-educated non-native individuals are entering the competitive labour market while struggling with writing in Dutch. From research ...read more
As the use of machine translation (MT) continues to grow, along with the increasing societal demand for inclusivity, research on gender bias in MT is expanding. Gender bias becomes particularly ...read more
In the DBBE and EVWRIT projects, a lot of work has been done in the digitization of Late Antique formulaic texts. With this project, we aim to analyze how we ...read more