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Corpus Linguistics -

Corpus Linguistics

Douglas Biber, Randi Reppen (Herausgeber)

Media-Kombination
1592 Seiten
2011
SAGE Publications Ltd
978-0-85702-964-5 (ISBN)
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This four-volume collection is organized around linguistic research questions relating to lexical studies, grammar, language varieties and applications, that can be investigated from a corpus perspective.
Corpus linguistics is a research approach to investigate the patterns of language use empirically, based on analysis of large collections of natural texts. While corpus-based analysis has had relatively little influence on theoretical linguistics, it has revolutionized the study of language variation and use: what speakers and writers actually do with the lexical and grammatical resources of a language. Corpus-based research employs the research methods of quantitative and qualitative social science to investigate language use patterns empirically.



This four-volume collection is organized around linguistic research questions that can be investigated from a corpus perspective and includes amongst others studies of individual words, comparisons of supposedly synonymous words, studies of grammatical variation, and sociolinguistic studies of dialects, registers, styles, and world varieties. Corpus-based analysis has also proven to be important for the study of historical change.





Volume One: Lexical Studies focuses on the study of word use, describing the ′collocational′ associations of words, and describing phraseological patterns in a language.





Volume Two: Grammar moves on to research questions that relate to grammar, including the special uses of a grammatical feature in a particular register, the discourse factors influencing the choice among grammatical variants, and lexico-grammatical patterns of association.





Volume Three: Varieties investigates registers, dialects, and national varieties of English. Some of these studies describe the characteristics of a particular variety; describe the ways in which registers or dialects differ in their preference for particular linguistic variants.





Volume Four: Methods and Applications addresses two major considerations: corpus design and analytical methods. This volume also includes a section on analyses of the patterns of use for learners of English as well as a section on the pedagogical implications of corpus research.

Volume I: Lexical Studies
Word Use
“It’s Just Real Messy”: The Occurrence and Function of Just in a Corpus of Academic Speech - Stephanie Lindemann and Anne Mauranen
Collocations and Semantic Prosody
The Discourse Function of Collocation in Research Article Introductions - Chris Gledhill
Verbs Observed: A Corpus-driven Pedagogic Grammar - Susan Hunston and Gill Francis
A Few Frequently Asked Questions about Semantic - or Evaluative - Prosody - John Morley and Alan Partington
The Use of Collocations by Advanced Learners of English and Some Implications for Teaching - Nadja Nesselhauf
′′Utterly Content in Each Other′s Company:′′ Semantic Prosody and Semantic Preference - Alan Partington
Lexical Repulsion between Sense-Related Pairs - Antoinette Renouf and Jayeeta Banerjee
Collocations and Semantic Profiles: On the Cause of the Trouble with Quantitative Studies - Michael Stubbs
Phraseology
If You Look at...: Lexical Bundles in University Teaching and Textbooks - Douglas Biber, Susan Conrad and Viviana Cortes
Uncovering the Extent of the Phraseological Tendency: Towards a Systematic Analysis of Concgrams - Winnie Cheng, Chris Greaves, John McH. Sinclair and Martin Warren
Clusters, Key Clusters and Local Textual Functions in Dickens - Michaela Mahlberg
Chunking in ELF: Expressions for Managing Interaction - Anna Mauranen
Lexical Bundles and Discourse Signalling in Academic Lectures - Hilary Nesi and Helen Basturkmen
Establishing the Phraseological Profile of a Text Type: The Construction of Meaning in Academic Book Reviews - Ute Römer
A Corpus-Based Study of Idioms in Academic Speech - Rita Simpson and Dushyanthi Mendis
An Academic Formulas List: New Methods in Phraseology Research - Rita Simpson-Vlach and Nick C. Ellis
Volume II: Grammar
Analysis of Grammatical Features and Grammatical Variation
Argument or Evidence? Disciplinary Variation in the Use of the Noun That Pattern in Stance Construction - Maggie Charles
Testing the Sub-Test : An Analysis of English -ic and -ical Adjectives - Stefan Th. Gries
Hooking the Reader: A Corpus Study of Evaluative That in Abstracts - Ken Hyland and Polly Tse
There′s Two Ways to Say It: Modeling Nonprestige There’s - Brian Riordan
Understanding Non-Restrictive Which-Clauses in Spoken English, Which Is Not an Easy Thing - Hongyin Tao and Michael J. McCarthy
Historical Studies of Grammatical Variation
Recent Changes in the Function and Frequency of Standard English Genitive Constructions: A Multivariate Analysis of Tagged Corpora - Lars Hinrichs and Benedikt Szmrecsanyi
Three Changing Patterns of Verb Complementation in Late Modern English: A Real-time Study Based on Matching Text Corpora - Christian Mair
Grammar and Pragmatics
Politeness and Modal Meaning in the Construction of Humiliative Discourse in an Early Eighteenth-century Network of Patron-Client Relationships - Susan Fitzmaurice
Diachronic Speech Act Analysis: Insults from Flyting to Flaming - Andreas H. Jucker and Irma Taavitsainen
Grammars of Spoken English: New Outcomes of Corpus-Oriented Research - Geoffrey Leech
Language Users as Creatures of Habit: A Corpus-based Analysis of Persistence in Spoken English - Benedikt Szmrecsanyi
Lexico-Grammatical Studies
Lexical-grammatical Patterns in Spoken English: The Case of the Progressive with Future Time Reference - Nadja Nesselhauf and Ute Römer
Collostructions: Investigating the Interaction of Words and Constructions - Anatol Stefanowitsch and Stefan Th. Gries
Volume III: Varieties
Descriptions of a Register
The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1675-1975: A Sociohistorical Discourse Analysis - Dwight Atkinson
Linguistic Variation in the Discourse of Outsourced Call Centers - Eric Friginal
Rhetorical Structure of Biochemistry Research Articles - Budsaba Kanoksilapatham
Conventions of Professional Writing: The Medical Case Report in a Historical Perspective - Irma Taavitsainen and Päivi Pahta
Using Computerized Corpus Analysis to Investigate the Textlinguistic Discourse Moves of a Genre - Thomas A. Upton and Ulla Connor
Register Variation
Speaking and Writing in the University: A Multidimensional Comparison - Douglas Biber, Susan Conrad, Randi Reppen, Pat Byrd and Marie Helt
Spoken and Written Register Variation in Spanish: A Multi-dimensional Analysis - Douglas Biber, Mark Davies, James K. Jones and Nicole Tracy-Ventura
′′Agile′′ and ′′Uptight′′ Genres: The Corpus-based Approach to Language Change in Progress - Marianne Hundt and Christian Mair
Dialect Variation
Gender Differences in the Evolution of Standard English: Evidence from the Corpus of Early English Correspondence - Terttu Nevalainen
Frequency and Variation in the Community Grammar: Tracking a New Change through the Generations - Sali A. Tagliamonte and Alexandra D′Arcy
Corpus-based Dialectometry: A Methodological Sketch - Benedikt Szmrecsanyi
National Varieties and World Englishes
The Committee Has/Have Decided... On Concord Patterns with Collective Nouns in Inner- and Outer- Circle Varieties of English - Marianne Hundt
Describing Verb-Complementational Profiles of New Englishes: A Pilot Study of Indian English - Joybrato Mukherjee and Sebastian Hoffmann
Cultural Discourse in the Corpus of East African English and beyond: Possibilities and Problems of Lexical and Collocational Research in a One Million-word Corpus - Josef Schmied
Tag Questions in English: The First Century - Gunnel Tottie and Sebastian Hoffmann
Volume IV: Methods and Applications
Corpus Design
Representativeness in Corpus Design - Douglas Biber
Data in Historical Pragmatics: Spoken Interaction (Re)Cast as Writing - Jonathan Culpeper and Merja Kytö
The Linguistic Study of Early Modern English Speech-Related Texts: How “Bad” Can “Bad” Data Be? - Merja Kytö and Terry Walker
Analytical Methods
Keyness: Words, Parts-of-Speech and Semantic Categories in the Character-Talk of Shakespeare′s Romeo and Juliet - Jonathan Culpeper
Dispersions and Adjusted Frequencies in Corpora - Stefan Th. Gries
Comparing Corpora - Adam Kilgarriff
From Key Words to Key Semantic Domains - Paul Rayson
Corpus Investigations for Applied Purposes
Lexical Coverage of Spoken Discourse - Svenja Adolphs and Norbert Schmitt
The Grammatical and Lexical Patterning of MAKE in Native and Non-Native Student Writing - Bengt Altenberg and Sylviane Granger
What Does Frequency Have to Do with Grammar Teaching? - Douglas Biber and Randi Reppen
A New Academic Word List - Averil Coxhead
Connector Usage in the English Essay Writing of Native and Non-Native EFL Speakers of English - Sylviane Granger and Stephanie Tyson
Pedagogical Applications
Is There Any Measurable Learning from Hands-on Concordancing? - Tom Cobb
Using Corpus Tools to Highlight Academic Vocabulary in SCLT - Kate M. Donley and Randi Reppen
Learner Corpora: The Missing Link in EAP Pedagogy - Gaëtanelle Gilquin, Sylviane Granger and Magali Paquot
Using Language Corpora in Initial Teacher Education: Pedagogic Issues and Practical Applications - Anne O′Keeffe and Fiona Farr

Erscheint lt. Verlag 19.12.2011
Reihe/Serie SAGE Benchmarks in Language and Linguistics
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 3000 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Sprachwissenschaft
ISBN-10 0-85702-964-9 / 0857029649
ISBN-13 978-0-85702-964-5 / 9780857029645
Zustand Neuware
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