Lexical cohesion and corpus linguistics

Bibliographic Information

Lexical cohesion and corpus linguistics

edited by John Flowerdew, Michaela Mahlberg

(Benjamins current topics, v. 17)

John Benjamins, c2009

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Lexical cohesion is about meaning in text. It concerns the ways in which lexical items relate to each other and to other cohesive devices so that textual continuity is created. Traditionally, lexical cohesion (along with other types of cohesion) has been investigated in individual texts. With the advent of corpus techniques, however, there is potential to investigate lexical cohesion with reference to large corpora. This collection of papers illustrates a variety of corpus approaches to lexical cohesion. Contributions deal with lexical cohesion in relation to rhetorical structure, lexical bundles and discourse signalling, discourse intonation, semantic prosody, use of signalling nouns, and corpus linguistic theory. The volume also considers implications that innovative approaches to lexical cohesion can have for language teaching. This volume was originally published as a Special Issue of International Journal of Corpus Linguistics volume 11:3 (2006).

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Lexical cohesion and rhetorical structure (by Morley, John)
  • 3. Lexical bundles and discourse signalling in academic lectures (by Nesi, Hilary)
  • 4. Cohesive chains and speakers' choice of prominence (by Warren, Martin)
  • 5. Describing the extended meanings of lexical cohesion in a corpus of SARS spoken discourse (by Cheng, Winnie)
  • 6. Use of signalling nouns in a learner corpus (by Flowerdew, John)
  • 7. Lexical cohesion: Corpus linguistic theory and its application English in language teaching (by Mahlberg, Michaela)
  • 8. Index

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