English syntax, Dialect, English as a world language, English dialects, English language acquisition, English morphology, English phonetics and phonology, English semantics, Frisian, German language acquisition, German phonetics and phonology, Intercultural communication, Language acquisition, Language comprehension, Perception, Phonetics and phonology, Psycholinguistics, Psycholinguistics, Psycholinguistics, Psychology of cognition, Psychology of learning, Sociolects (child language, language of adolescents, immigrants, specialised language etc), Varieties of English outside the British Isles
English syntax, Cognition research, English morphology, English semantics, Evolution, Generative linguistics, Language comprehension, Modularity, Neurolinguistics (Language and the brain), Psycholinguistics (Parsing), Psychology of cognition, Psychology of thinking and problem resolution (cognitive bias, Critical thinking), Quantitative Methods (experimental linguistics), Syntax
English syntax, Danish dialects, Danish morphology (word formation adn inflection), Danish phonetics and phonology (sound system), Danish pragmatics (language use), Danish syntax sentence structure, Dansk semantics (meaning), Dialect, English dialects, English morphology, English phonetics and phonology, English pragmatics (word use), English semantics, French syntax, Generative linguistics, German dialects, German morphology, German phonetics and phonology, German syntax, History of the Danish language, History of the english language, Language history (comparative linguistics, etymology), Morphology, Phonetics and phonology, Syntax, Yiddish (Yiddish syntax)
English syntax, Attitudes to language, Corpus linguistics, Dialect, English as a world language, English dialects, English etymology and lexichology, English morphology, Generative linguistics, Language history (comparative linguistics, etymology), Language norms (orthography), Pragmatic linguistics (Historical Pragmatics), Specialised language research (The Paston Family), Syntax, Text typology (genre theory) (Personal Letters), Varieties of English outside the British Isles