Bibliographic Information

Extending the scope of corpus-based research : new applications, new challenges

edited by Sylviane Granger, Stepanie Petch-Tyson

(Language and computers : studies in practical linguistics, no. 48)

Rodopi, 2003

Available at  / 22 libraries

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Note

Papers from a conference sponsord by ICAME, 2001

"ICAME 2001, the twenty-second Conference of the International Computer Archive of Modern and Medieval English was held in Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium in May 2001"--P. 12, note 1

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Extending the scope of corpus-based research: new applications, new challenges is a collection of articles which highlights some of the challenges facing English Corpus Linguistics at the beginning of the 21st century and shows how these challenges are being addressed by researchers. In sections on corpus methodology, language description and foreign language learning and teaching, researchers address a broad range of topics from methodological standardization, experimental research design, tagging and parsing corpora and the value of enriched corpus annotation to web-based research, tools for analysing language on the web and language learning via an Internet Grammar. There is a broad spectrum of research encompassing grammatical and lexical analyses of different varieties of early and Modern English, bilingual code switching, learner English and theoretical and practical approaches to the 0-d spoken medium. As such, the collection offers a global, up-to-date appreciation of theoretical and practical issues which will be of value to researchers in many areas of English Linguistics.

Table of Contents

List of contributors Preface I. Corpora and methodology Inge de MOENNINK, Niek BROM & Nelleke OOSTDIJK: Using the MF/MD method for automatic text classification Sean WALLIS: Scientific experiments in parsed corpora: an overview Antoinette RENOUF: WebCorp: providing a renewable data source for corpus linguists Nelleke OOSTDIJK: Normalization and disfluencies in spoken language data Pam PETERS & Adam SMITH: Textual structure and segmentation in online documents II. Corpora in language description Maurizio GOTTI: Shall and will as first person future auxiliaries in a corpus of Early Modern English texts Arja NURMI: The role of gender in the use of MUST in Early Modern English Joybrato MUKHERJEE: From corpus data to a theory of talk units in spoken English Bernhard KETTEMANN, Martina KOENIG & Georg MARKO: The BNC and the OED. Examining the usefulness of two different types of data in an analysis of the morpheme eco Goeran KJELLMER: Lexical gaps Hajar Abdul RAHIM & Harshita Aini HAROON: The use of native lexical items in English texts as a codeswitching strategy Geoffrey SAMPSON: The structure of children's writing: moving from spoken to adult written norms III. Corpora in foreign language learning and teaching Mia BOSTROEM ARONSSON: On clefts and information structure in Swedish EFL writing JoAnne NEFF, Emma DAFOUZ, Honesto HERRERA, Francisco MARTINEZ, Juan Pedro RICA, Mercedes DIEZ, Rosa PRIETO & Carmen SANCHO: Contrasting learner corpora: the use of modal and reporting verbs in the expression of writer stance Josef SCHMIED: Learning English prepositions in the Chemnitz Internet Grammar Pascual PEREZ-PAREDES: Integrating networked learner oral corpora into foreign language instruction

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