Books
[1]Baerman, Matthew; Corbett, Greville G.; Brown, Dunstan; and Andrew Hippisley (eds). (2007) Deponency and morphological mismatches. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
[2]Brown, Dunstan; and Andrew Hippisley. Forthcoming. Default Morphology. Manuscript to be reviewed by Cambridge University Press, for ‘blue series’.
Refereed publications
[1]Hippisley, Andrew. Forthcoming a. A declarative approach to language change: regularization as realignment. To appear in Papers from the 44th Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society. Chicago: CLS. pdf
[2]Hippisley, Andrew. Forthcoming b. Morphological Typology. To appear in: Hogan, Patrick (ed.) The Cambridge Encyclopedia for the Language Sciences. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.pdf
[3]Hippisley, Andrew. 2010a. Paradigmatic realignment and morphological change: diachronic deponency in Network Morphology. In: Wolfgang Dressler et al. (eds) Variation and Change in Morphology. Selected papers from the 13th International Morphology Meeting, Vienna February 2008. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins. pdf
[4]Hippisley, Andrew. 2010b. Lexical Analysis. In: Indurkhya, Nitin and Frederick Damerau (eds) The Handbook of Natural Language Processing, Second Edition. pages 31-57. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press, Taylor & Francis.
[5]Hippisley, Andrew; Davies, Ian; and Grevlle Corbett. 2008. The basic colour terms of Lower Sorbian and Upper Sorbian and their typological relevance. Studies in Language, issue 1, 2008. 56-92. pdf
[6]Hippisley, Andrew. 2007. Declarative deponency. In: Baerman et al. (eds) Deponency and morphological mismatches. pages 145-173. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pdf
[7]Hippisley, Andrew; and Ian Davies. 2006. Evolving secondary colours: evidence from Sorbian. In: Biggam, Carole P.; and Christian J. Kay (eds) Progress in Colour Studies. Vol 1: Language and Culture. 127-144. Amsterdam: Benjamins. pdf
[8]Ahmad, K., Gillam, L., Cheng, D., Taskaya, T., Ahmad, S., Manomaisupat, P., Traboulsi, H. & Hippisley, A. 2006. The mood of the (financial) markets: in a corpus of words and of pictures. In: Andrew Wilson et al (eds) Corpus Linguistics Around the World. pages 17-32. Amsterdam: Rodopi Publishers.
[9]Hippisley, Andrew; Cheng, David; and Ahmad, Khurshid. 2005. The Head Modifier Principle and Multilingual Term Extraction. Natural Language Engineering 11 (2).129-157.pdf
[10]Lin, Ling; Liotta, Antonio; and Hippisley, Andrew. 2005. A Method for Automating the Extraction of Specialized Information from the Web. In: Yue Hao et al. (eds) IEEE Computational Intelligence and Security. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3801. pages 489-494. pdf
[11]Corbett, Greville, G.; Brown, Dunstan; Chumakina, Marina; and Andrew Hippisley. 2005. A typological database of suppletion. In: Geert Booij et al. (eds) Morphology and Linguistic Typology: Proceedings of the Fourth Mediterranean Morphology Meeting. Catania. 35-44. pdf
[12]Hippisley, Andrew; Chumakina, Marina; Corbett, Greville and Dunstan Brown. 2004. Suppletion: frequency, categories and distribution of stems. Studies in Language 28 (2).389-421. pdf
[13]Chumakina, Marina; Hippisley, Andrew and Corbett, Greville. 2004. Исторические изменения в русской лексике: случай чередующегося супплетивизма [Historical changes in the Russian lexicon: alternating suppletion]. Russian Linguistics 28.281-315. pdf
[14]Hippisley, Andrew; and Karavasili, Chara. 2004. A natural language approach to information management: tracking scientific advances through the structure of words. In: Marai Teresa Lino et al. (eds) Fourth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation, 6 vols. 1321-1324. pdf
[15]Hippisley, Andrew; Cheng, David; and Ahmad, Khurshid. 2002. Chinese special languages and the notion of headedness. In: Merja Koskela, Chrisetr Laurén, Marianne Nordman and Nina Pilke (eds) Proceedings of the University of Vaasa, Porta Scientiae vol 1. Vaasa: Vaasan yliopisto. 329-342. pdf
[16]Hippisley, Andrew. 2001a. Word Formation Rules in a default inheritance framework: a Network Account of Russian personal nouns. In: Jaap van Marle and Geert Booij (eds) Yearbook of Morphology 1999 (=Morphology). Dordrecht: Kluwer.221-261. pdf
[17]Hippisley, Andrew. 2001b. Basic BLUE in East Slavonic. Linguistics.1039-1124. pdf
[18]Hippisley, Andrew. 2001c. Suppletion, Frequency and Lexical Storage. In: Andronis, Mary; Christopher Ball, Heidi Elston and Sylvain Neuvel (eds) Papers from the 37th Meeting of Chicago Linguistics Society. Vol. 1. Chicago: CLS. 201-14. pdf
[19]Corbett, Greville; Hippisley, Andrew; Brown, Dunstan; and Marriott, Paul. 2001. Frequency, regularity and the paradigm: a perspective from Russian on a complex relation. In: Joan Bybee and Paul Hopper (eds) Typological Studies in Language (45): Frequency and the Emergence of Linguistic Structure. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.201-226. pdf
[20]Hippisley, Andrew; Tariq, Mariam; and Chang, David. 2001. Hierarchical data and the derivational relationship between words. In: Bird, Steven; Buneman, Peter and Mark Lieberman (eds) Proceedings of the Institute for Research into Cognitive Sciences Workshop on Linguistic Databases, Penn University.125-133. pdf
[21]Hippisley, Andrew; and Gazdar, Gerald. 1999. Inheritance hierarchies and historical reconstruction: towards a history of Slavonic colour terms. In: Sabrina Billings, John Boyle and Aaron Griffith (eds) Papers from the 35th Meeting of Chicago Linguistics Society. Vol. 1. Chicago: CLS.125-140. pdf
[22]Hippisley, Andrew. 1998a. Indexed stems and Russian word formation: a Network Morphology account of Russian personal nouns. Linguistics 36 (6).1039-1124. pdf
[23]Hippisley, Andrew. 1998b. Review article of Russian-English Collocational Dictionary of the Human Body (by Lidija Iordanskaja and Slava Paperno), Slavonic and East European Review 76 (1), 104-5. pdf
[24]Hippisley, Andrew. 1996. Russian Expressive Derivation: a Network Morphology Account, Slavonic and East European Review 74 (2).201-222. pdf
[25]Brown, Dunstan; Corbett, Greville; Fraser, Norman; Hippisley, Andrew and Timberlake, Alan. 1996. Russian noun stress and Network Morphology, Linguistics 34 (1).53-107. pdf
[26]Brown, Dunstan; and Hippisley, Andrew. 1994. Conflict in Russian Genitive Plural Assignment: a Solution Represented in DATR, Journal of Slavic Linguistics 2 (1).48-76. pdf
PhD Dissertation
Declarative Derivation: a Network Morphology account of Russian word formation with reference to nouns denoting 'person'. University of Surrey, 1997. pdf
Refereed Conference papers
[1]Hippisley, Andrew. 2009a. “Prolegomena to a defaults-based theory of word-formation.” Paper read at the Linguistics Association of Great Britain Meeting, University of Edinburgh. September 2009.
[2]Hippisley, Andrew. 2009b. “Towards a declarative definition of derivational relatedness: an orthogonal multiple inheritance approach to word-formation typology.” Paper read at Universals and Typology in Word-Formation, Šafárik University, Košice, Slovakia. August 2009.
[3]Hippisley, Andrew and Gregory Stump. 2009a. “Realization without exponence: the Shughni past tense.” Paper read at the Linguistics Association of Great Britain Meeting, University of Edinburgh. September 2009.
[4] Hippisley, Andrew and Gregory Stump. 2009b. “Valence sensitivity in Pamirian past-tense inflection: a realizational analysis”. Paper read at the Third International Conference on Iranian Linguistics, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris, September 2009.
[5]Hippisley, Andrew; Stump, Gregory and Raphael Finkel. 2009. “Computing in the field: Automated elicitation and documentation.” Paper read at the. First International Conference on Language Documentation & Conservation, University of Hawaii. March 2009.
[6]Hippisley, Andrew. 2008a. “Morphological change as virtually no change at all: defaults and Latin deponents.” Paper read at the 13th International Morphology Meeting, University of Vienna, February 2008.
[7]Hippisley, Andrew. 2008b. “Lexical change and the paradigm: a declarative approach to language change.” Paper read at the 44th Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society, University of Chicago, April 2008.
[8]Hippisley, Andrew. 2005. “Heads you win, non-heads you lose: counting search terms in compounds.” Paper read at the Corpus Linguistics 2005 conference, University of Birmingham, July 2005.
[9]Hippisley, Andrew; and Davies, Ian. 2004. “Evolving secondary colours: evidence from Sorbian”. Paper read at the Progress in Colour Studies 2004 conference, University of Glasgow, July 2004.
[10]Chumakina, Marina; Hippisley, Andrew; and Corbett, Greville. 2004. “Alternating suppletion”. Paper read at the Linguistic Association of Great Britain, Somerville College, Oxford, September 2004.
[11]Chumakina, Marina; Hippisley, Andrew and Corbett, Greville. 2003. Исторические изменения в русской лексике: случаи чередующегося супплетивизма. Paper read at the British Association of Studies in Slavonic and East European Studies, Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge University, 30th March 2003.
[12]Brown, Dunstan; Chumakina, Marina; Corbett, Greville; Hippisley, Andrew. 2002. Prototypical suppletion. Paper read at the Linguistic Association of Great Britain, University of Manchester Institute of Technology, September 2002.
[13]Hippisley, Andrew; Cheng, David; & Ahmad, Khurshid. 2001. “Chinese special languages and the notion of headedness”. Paper read at the 13th Languages for Special Purposes Symposium, University of Vaasa, Finland, 24th August 2001.
[14]Hippisley, Andrew. 2001. “Suppletion, Frequency and Lexical Storage”. Paper read at the 37th Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society, University of Chicago, April 2001.
[15]Hippisley, Andrew. 2000a. “East Slavonic BLUEs.”. Paper read at the British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies, Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge University, 2 April 2000.
[16]Hippisley, Andrew. 2000b. “The Ukrainian colour system: a formal account.” Paper read at the Second Northwest Slavic Linguistics Conference, University California at Berkeley, 12 March 2000.
[17]Hippisley, Andrew & Gazdar, Gerald. 1999. “Inheritance hierarchies and historical reconstruction: towards a history of Slavonic colour terms.” Paper read at the 35th Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society, University of Chicago, April 1999.
[18]Hippisley, Andrew; Corbett, Greville; Brown, Dunstan & Marriott, Paul. 1999. “Frequency, Irregularity and the Paradigm.” Paper read at the Linguistics Association of Great Britain, University of Manchester, April 1999.
[19]Hippisley, Andrew. “Russian derivation.” 1996. Paper read at the British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies, Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge University, March 1996.
[20]Hippisley, Andrew. 1995. “A DATR approach to Russian word formation.” Paper read at the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages Annual Conference, Chicago, December 1995.
[21]Hippisley, Andrew. 1995a. “Russian lexeme formation: a lexeme-based approach to derivational morphology in DATR.” Paper read at the Linguistics Association of Great Britain, University of Essex, September 1995.
[22]Hippisley, Andrew. 1995b. “Default inheritance and word formation: an account of Russian expressive derivation represented in DATR.” Paper read at the conference Linguistics by the end of the Twentieth Century: Achievements and Perspectives, Moscow State University, February 1995.
[22]Hippisley, Andrew. 1994a. “Network Morphology and the Derivational / Inflectional Interface.” Paper read at the Linguistics Association of Great Britain, Autumn meeting, University of Middlesex, September 1994.
[23]Hippisley, Andrew. 1994b “Default Inheritance and Word-formation: English and Russian Derivational Morphology.” Paper read at the Linguistics Association of Great Britain, Spring meeting, University of Salford, April 1994.
[24]Hippisley, Andrew. 1994c. “Blocking in Russian and English Derivational Morphology: a Default Inheritance Account.” Paper read at the Third Postgraduate Linguistics Conference, University of Manchester, March 1994.
[25]Brown, Dunstan; & Hippisley, Andrew. 1993a “Russian Genitive Plural and the Paradigm.” Paper read at the Linguistics Association of Great Britain, University of Birmingham, Spring meeting, March 1993.
[26]Brown, Dunstan; & Hippisley, Andrew. 1993b. “Russian Genitive Plural and the Paradigm.” Paper read at the Second Postgraduate Linguistics Conference, University of Manchester, March 1993.