dr hab. Krzysztof Jaskuła (prof. KUL)
Wydział Nauk Humanistycznych - Instytut JęzykoznawstwaKatedra Językoznawstwa Porównawczego Angielsko-Polskiego
Stanowisko: Profesor KUL
Wypromowane prace dyplomowe
2023
Prace magisterskie
- Vowels in the History of English – Qualitative and Quantitative Changes
2022
Prace magisterskie
- Standard and Non-Standard Phonological Forms in Contemporary Jamaican Music
- A Comparison of Animal Idioms from English, German and Polish
- “The Crown” – A Comparative Analysis of English Idioms and Their Polish Equivalents Employed in the Netflix Series
- The History and Characteristic Features of the Quenya Language Created by J.R.R.Tolkien
- An Analysis of English and Polish Biblical Idioms
- Selected Aspects of English Idioms in ''Fawlty Towers''
- Morphological and Psychological Aspects of Naming Products in Advertising
2021
Prace magisterskie
- An analysis of false friends in English, Polish and Italian
- The perception of animal idioms by selected Polish juvenile delinquents
2020
Prace magisterskie
- Idiomatic expressions in the speeches of British and American politicians
- Borrowings from English in the "Magic: The Gathering" Community in Poland
- Anglicisms and Other Loanwords in the Russian language
- Fashion Speech - The Influence of English on Polish and German blog language
- An analysis of the use of slang in selected movies
- Hinglish - a fashion or a new lingua franca in contemporary India?
- The Cockney dialect and slang in selected movies and TV series.
- Language as evidence: forensic discourse and text analysis of selected murder and fraud cases in the US Criminal Justice System
2019
Prace magisterskie
- An analysis of the masculine names of professions and their feminine equivalents in English, Polish and other languages
- Lenition processes in English and Andalusian Spanish
- Vowel – zero alternations in Polish from a diachronic and synchronic perspective
- Neologisms in the cooking jargon
- Influence of electronic media on the acquisition of English loanwords in written and spoken Russian
2017
Prace magisterskie
- Historical and contemporary interactions between the lexicons of English and Dutch
- English and Icelandic – a comparison of selected phonological issues
- Language beyond borders: the correlation between Ponglish and bilingualism among Polish speakers
- The influence of English loanwords on Polish electronic media.
2014
Prace magisterskie
- To head, or not to head, that is the question: the application of Element Theory in English, Finnish and Italian.
- An analysis of vocalic systems of English and major Italian dialects.
- An analysis of the schwa sound in English and German
- Throughout the years: from Late Old to Modern English. An analysis of vocalic changes.
- Word-initial consonant clusters in French, Spanish and English – a comparative analysis.
- Selected issues in devoicing in Dutch, English and Polish
- A phonological comparison of British English and Egyptian Arabic
2012
Prace licencjackie
- An Analysis of Selected English Accents
- Word-final consonant clusters in English and Polish
- A government-based approach to consonant clusters in Sindarin and Old English
- An element-based comparison of English and Italian vocalic systems
- A comparison of Polish and English word initial consonant clusters
- The phonetics and phonology of selected Scandinavian and French loanwords in the history of English
- The Great Vowel Shift. An element-based approach
- Negative sonorant-final prefixes in English — a domain-based approach
- From Old English to Middle English – monophthong vocalic changes. An element-based analysis.
- Phonetic interactions between consonants in English and Russian
- Selected assimilation phenomena in English and Polish
- Problems with the Acquisition of English Vocalic Expressions by Speakers of Polish
- Phonological and phonetic differences between Jamaican and British English
2011
Prace licencjackie
- Devoicing phenomena in English and Polish- phonological and phonetic issues.
- The Structure of Long Vowels in Irish and English- A Government-Based Approach.
- The phonological behaviour of the schwa sound in English and Dutch.
- Licensing at word edges in English and Spanish.
- Vowel reduction phenomena in selected affixed and non-affixed words of English.
- An element-based analysis of long vocalic expressions in Welsh and English.
- Vowel lengthening phenomena before and after Old English.
- The Behaviour of Selected Sonorants in English and Norwegian: A Government Phonology Approach.
- Fricatives in Old Welsh and Old English- a comparative study.
Prace magisterskie
- English loanwords in Japanese. A linguistic analysis
2010
Prace licencjackie
- Liquids in Welsh and English - distribution and phonological behaviour.
- Affricates in English and Polish - an element-based approach.
- Word-final consonant clusters in selected dialects of English.
- Diphthongs in the history of English - an element-based approach.
- Polish and English fricatives- now and earlier.
- Suffix-motivated stress changes in English - phonological domains.
- Word-initial branching onsets and s+C(C) groups in English and Welsh.
2007
Prace licencjackie
- Theories of language acquisition.
- The Evolution of English dictionaries.
- Similarities in the pronounciation of Polish and English vowels.
- Past tenses in English and Polish - a comparative study.
- Vowel reduction and elision in English.
- Slang - the language of subculture ; its origins and purposes.
- Derivational and inflectional morphology in English and Polish.
- Selected English phrasal verbs vs. verbs with prefixes in Polish.
- Regular and Suppletive Relational Adjectives in English.
- Present tenses in English and Polish - a comparative study.
- Future tenses in English and Polish - a comparative study.
2006
Prace licencjackie
- Selected Syntactic Differences between English and Polish Tenses.
- Word-initial Clusters in English - Typical Sonority Profiles.
- Difficulties in Acquiring English Consonants by Polish Speakers.
- English Slang and Colloquialisms - a Study based on the Film "Hooligans".
- Negation in English and Polish.