|
Showing 1 - 17 of
17 matches in All Departments
This volume will give readers insight into how genres are
characterised by the patterns of frequency and distribution of
linguistic features across a number of European languages. The
material presented in this book will also stimulate further
corpus-based contrastive research including more languages, more
genres and different types of corpora. This is the first special
issue of the Yearbook of Corpus Linguistics and Pragmatics, a
publication that addresses the interface between the two
disciplines and offers a platform to scholars who combine both
methodologies to present rigorous and interdisciplinary findings
about language in real use. Corpus linguistics and Pragmatics have
traditionally represented two paths of scientific thought, parallel
but often mutually exclusive and excluding. Corpus Linguistics can
offer a meticulous methodology based on mathematics and statistics,
while Pragmatics is characterized by its effort in the
interpretation of intended meaning in real language.
Featuring contributions from an international team of leading and
up-and-coming scholars, this innovative volume provides a
comprehensive sociolinguistic picture of current spoken British
English based on the Spoken BNC2014, a brand new corpus of British
speech. The book begins with short introductions highlighting the
state-of-the-art in three major areas of corpus-based
sociolinguistics, while the remaining chapters feature rigorous
analysis of the research outcomes of the project grounded in Spoken
BNC2014 data samples, highlighting English used in everyday
situations in the UK, with brief summaries reflecting on the
sociolinguistic implications of this research included at the end
of each chapter. This unique and robust dataset allows this team of
researchers the unique opportunity to focus on speaker
characteristics such as gender, age, dialect and socio-economic
status, to examine a range of sociolinguistic dimensions, including
grammar, pragmatics, and discourse, and to reflect on the major
changes that have occurred in British society since the last corpus
was compiled in the 1990s. This dynamic new contribution to the
burgeoning field of corpus-based sociolinguistics is key reading
for students and scholars in sociolinguistics, corpus linguistics,
pragmatics, grammar, and British English.
Pragmatics of society takes a socio-cultural perspective on
pragmatics and gives a broad view of how social and cultural
factors influence language use. The volume covers a wide range of
topics within the field of sociopragmatics. This subfield of
pragmatics encompasses sociolinguistic studies that focus on how
pragmatic and discourse features vary according to
macro-sociological variables such as age, gender, class and region
(variational pragmatics), and discourse/conversation analytical
studies investigating variation according to the activity engaged
in by the participants and the identities displayed as relevant in
interaction. The volume also covers studies in linguistic
pragmatics with a more general socio-cultural focus, including
global and intercultural communication, politeness, critical
discourse analysis and linguistic anthropology. Each article
presents the state-of-the-art of the topic at hand, as well as new
research.
The present collection of articles, presented at the 8th IADA
Conference in Goteborg, focuses on understanding and
misunderstanding as dialogic phenomena. The notion of a dialogic
grammar and dialogic principles as a framework for understanding
human communication and cognition is explored in several
contributions. Misunderstanding in dialogue is dealt with in
institutional and non-institutional settings, in fiction and film
dialogue, from several different theoretical perspectives."
In spite of the vast literature on modality in English, very little
research has been done on modal adverbs as a group. While there are
studies of individual adverbs, the semantic and pragmatic relations
between them have been left largely unexplored. This book takes a
close look at the whole field of modal certainty as expressed by
adverbs in English. On the basis of corpus data the most frequent
adverbs of certainty, including certainly, indeed, and no doubt,
are examined from the point of view of their syntactic, semantic
and pragmatic characteristics. The corpus used is the International
Corpus of English - Great Britain, supplemented by data from other
present-day English corpora, and questionnaires testing native
speakers' intuitions on fine-grained similarities and differences
between closely related adverbs. The methodology also includes the
study of cross-linguistic equivalents as indicators of
semantic-pragmatic relations between adverbs. Translation corpora
yield correspondences in Swedish, Dutch, French and German. A
detailed study of those correspondences adds useful information for
setting up a semantic-pragmatic profile of each adverb, showing
where their meanings overlap and where the boundaries are. The
concept of semantic maps is relied on for plotting these relations.
The book not only provides a thorough empirical study of English
adverbs expressing certainty, it also contributes to a better
theoretical understanding of the complexity of modal certainty, how
it is related to speakers' goals and to other semantic areas. It is
the first in-depth study of this kind, combining rich information
on English as well as opening up perspectives for further empirical
and theoretical research into modality.
This collection of articles form a tribute to Jan Svartvik and his
pioneering work in the field. Covers corpus studies, problematic
grammar, institution-based and observation-based grammars and the
design and development of spoken and written text corpora in
different varieties of English.
Routledge Applied Linguistics is a series of comprehensive
textbooks, providing students and researchers with the support they
need for advanced study in the core areas of English language and
applied linguistics. Each book in the series guides readers through
three main sections, enabling them to explore and develop major
themes within the discipline. Section A: Introduction, establishes
the key terms and concepts and extends readers' techniques of
analysis through practical application. Section B: Extension,
brings together influential articles, sets them in context, and
discusses their contribution to the field. Section C: Exploration,
builds on knowledge gained in the first two sections, setting
thoughtful tasks around further illustrative material. This enables
readers to engage more actively with the subject matter and
encourages them to develop their own research responses. Throughout
the book, topics are revisited, extended, interwoven and
deconstructed, with the reader's understanding strengthened by
tasks and follow-up questions. Pragmatics: provides a broad view of
pragmatics from a range of perspectives, gathering readings from
key names in the discipline, including Geoffrey Leech, Michael
McCarthy, Thomas Kohnen, Joan Manes and Nessa Wolfson covers a wide
variety of topics, including speech acts, pragmatic markers,
implicature, research methods in pragmatics, facework and
politeness, and prosody examines the social and cultural contexts
in which pragmatics occurs, such as in cross-cultural pragmatics
(silence, indirectness, forms of address, cultural scripts) and
pragmatics and power (the courtroom, police interaction, political
interviews and doctor-patient communication) uses a wide range of
corpora to provide both illustrative examples and exploratory tasks
is supported by a companion website at www.routledge.com/cw/archer
featuring extra activities and additional data for analysis,
guidance on undertaking corpus analysis and research, including how
to create your own corpus with CMC, and suggestions for further
reading. Written by experienced teachers and researchers in the
field, Pragmatics provides an essential resource for students and
researchers of applied linguistics.
Featuring contributions from an international team of leading and
up-and-coming scholars, this innovative volume provides a
comprehensive sociolinguistic picture of current spoken British
English based on the Spoken BNC2014, a brand new corpus of British
speech. The book begins with short introductions highlighting the
state-of-the-art in three major areas of corpus-based
sociolinguistics, while the remaining chapters feature rigorous
analysis of the research outcomes of the project grounded in Spoken
BNC2014 data samples, highlighting English used in everyday
situations in the UK, with brief summaries reflecting on the
sociolinguistic implications of this research included at the end
of each chapter. This unique and robust dataset allows this team of
researchers the unique opportunity to focus on speaker
characteristics such as gender, age, dialect and socio-economic
status, to examine a range of sociolinguistic dimensions, including
grammar, pragmatics, and discourse, and to reflect on the major
changes that have occurred in British society since the last corpus
was compiled in the 1990s. This dynamic new contribution to the
burgeoning field of corpus-based sociolinguistics is key reading
for students and scholars in sociolinguistics, corpus linguistics,
pragmatics, grammar, and British English.
It is surprising how much of everyday conversation consists of
repetitive expressions such as 'thank you', 'sorry', would you
mind?' and their many variants. However commonplace they may be,
they do have important functions in communication. This thorough
study draws upon original data from the London-Lund Corpus of
Spoken English to provide a discoursal and pragmatic account of the
more common expressions found in conversational routines, such as
apologising, thanking, requesting and offering. The routines
studied in this book range from conventionalized or idiomatized
phrases to those which can be generated by grammar. Examples have
been taken from face-to-face conversations, radio discussions and
telephone conversations, and transcription has been based upon the
prosodic system of Crystal (1989). An extensive introduction
provides the theory and methodology for the book and discusses the
criteria for fixedness, grammatical analysis, and pragmatic
functions of conversational routines which are later applied to the
phrases. Following chapters deal specifically with phrases for
thanking, apologising, indirect requests, and discourse-organising
markers for conversational routines, on the basis of empirical
investigation of the data from the London-Lund Corpus of Spoken
English.
This collection of articles form a tribute to Jan Svartvik and his
pioneering work in the field. Covers corpus studies, problematic
grammar, institution-based and observation-based grammars and the
design and development of spoken and written text corpora in
different varieties of English.
It is surprising how much of everyday conversation consists of
repetitive expressions such as 'thank you', 'sorry', would you
mind?' and their many variants. However commonplace they may be,
they do have important functions in communication. This thorough
study draws upon original data from the London-Lund Corpus of
Spoken English to provide a discoursal and pragmatic account of the
more common expressions found in conversational routines, such as
apologising, thanking, requesting and offering. The routines
studied in this book range from conventionalized or idiomatized
phrases to those which can be generated by grammar. Examples have
been taken from face-to-face conversations, radio discussions and
telephone conversations, and transcription has been based upon the
prosodic system of Crystal (1989). An extensive introduction
provides the theory and methodology for the book and discusses the
criteria for fixedness, grammatical analysis, and pragmatic
functions of conversational routines which are later applied to the
phrases. Following chapters deal specifically with phrases for
thanking, apologising, indirect requests, and discourse-organising
markers for conversational routines, on the basis of empirical
investigation of the data from the London-Lund Corpus of Spoken
English.
This volume will give readers insight into how genres are
characterised by the patterns of frequency and distribution of
linguistic features across a number of European languages. The
material presented in this book will also stimulate further
corpus-based contrastive research including more languages, more
genres and different types of corpora. This is the first special
issue of the Yearbook of Corpus Linguistics and Pragmatics, a
publication that addresses the interface between the two
disciplines and offers a platform to scholars who combine both
methodologies to present rigorous and interdisciplinary findings
about language in real use. Corpus linguistics and Pragmatics have
traditionally represented two paths of scientific thought, parallel
but often mutually exclusive and excluding. Corpus Linguistics can
offer a meticulous methodology based on mathematics and statistics,
while Pragmatics is characterized by its effort in the
interpretation of intended meaning in real language.
Corpus linguistics is a long-established method which uses
authentic language data, stored in extensive computer corpora, as
the basis for linguistic research. Moving away from the traditional
intuitive approach to linguistics, which used made-up examples,
corpus linguistics has made a significant contribution to all areas
of the field. Until very recently, corpus linguistics has focused
almost exclusively on syntax and the lexicon; however corpus-based
approaches to the other subfields of linguistics are now rapidly
emerging, and this is the first handbook on corpus pragmatics as a
field. Bringing together a team of leading scholars from around the
world, this handbook looks at how the use of corpus data has
informed research into different key aspects of pragmatics,
including pragmatic principles, pragmatic markers, evaluation,
reference, speech acts, and conversational organisation.
Corpus linguistics is a long-established method which uses
authentic language data, stored in extensive computer corpora, as
the basis for linguistic research. Moving away from the traditional
intuitive approach to linguistics, which used made-up examples,
corpus linguistics has made a significant contribution to all areas
of the field. Until very recently, corpus linguistics has focused
almost exclusively on syntax and the lexicon; however corpus-based
approaches to the other subfields of linguistics are now rapidly
emerging, and this is the first handbook on corpus pragmatics as a
field. Bringing together a team of leading scholars from around the
world, this handbook looks at how the use of corpus data has
informed research into different key aspects of pragmatics,
including pragmatic principles, pragmatic markers, evaluation,
reference, speech acts, and conversational organisation.
Routledge Applied Linguistics is a series of comprehensive
textbooks, providing students and researchers with the support they
need for advanced study in the core areas of English language and
applied linguistics. Each book in the series guides readers through
three main sections, enabling them to explore and develop major
themes within the discipline. Section A: Introduction, establishes
the key terms and concepts and extends readers' techniques of
analysis through practical application. Section B: Extension,
brings together influential articles, sets them in context, and
discusses their contribution to the field. Section C: Exploration,
builds on knowledge gained in the first two sections, setting
thoughtful tasks around further illustrative material. This enables
readers to engage more actively with the subject matter and
encourages them to develop their own research responses. Throughout
the book, topics are revisited, extended, interwoven and
deconstructed, with the reader's understanding strengthened by
tasks and follow-up questions. Pragmatics: provides a broad view of
pragmatics from a range of perspectives, gathering readings from
key names in the discipline, including Geoffrey Leech, Michael
McCarthy, Thomas Kohnen, Joan Manes and Nessa Wolfson covers a wide
variety of topics, including speech acts, pragmatic markers,
implicature, research methods in pragmatics, facework and
politeness, and prosody examines the social and cultural contexts
in which pragmatics occurs, such as in cross-cultural pragmatics
(silence, indirectness, forms of address, cultural scripts) and
pragmatics and power (the courtroom, police interaction, political
interviews and doctor-patient communication) uses a wide range of
corpora to provide both illustrative examples and exploratory tasks
is supported by a companion website at www.routledge.com/cw/archer
featuring extra activities and additional data for analysis,
guidance on undertaking corpus analysis and research, including how
to create your own corpus with CMC, and suggestions for further
reading. Written by experienced teachers and researchers in the
field, Pragmatics provides an essential resource for students and
researchers of applied linguistics.
This is a study of pragmatic markers in a corpus of spoken English.
Pragmatic markers are multifunctional and this can make it
difficult to describe their meaning and potential. In particular,
we know little about pragmatic markers and prosody, their
sociolinguistic use or their distribution across text types. This
book looks at pragmatic markers in a corpus of spoken English, with
a focus on the functions performed by the markers in different
types of text. Karen Aijmer explores the syntactic, semantic,
pragmatic and discourse aspects of the markers. By taking a broader
perspective on the markers, classifying them, describing their
class-specific properties and analysing individual markers, she
assesses whether any generalisations can be made about the prosody
of the markers. It includes a definition of pragmatic markers in
the context of the book. It features chapter-long case studies of
the pragmatic markers well, in fact and actually. Each chapter has
a clear introduction and conclusion.
This is a study of pragmatic markers in a corpus of spoken English.
Pragmatic markers are multifunctional and this can make it
difficult to describe their meaning and potential. In particular,
we know little about pragmatic markers and prosody, their
sociolinguistic use or their distribution across text types. This
book looks at pragmatic markers in a corpus of spoken English, with
a focus on the functions performed by the markers in different
types of text. Karen Aijmer explores the syntactic, semantic,
pragmatic and discourse aspects of the markers. By taking a broader
perspective on the markers, classifying them, describing their
class-specific properties and analysing individual markers, she
assesses whether any generalisations can be made about the prosody
of the markers. It includes a definition of pragmatic markers in
the context of the book. It features chapter-long case studies of
the pragmatic markers well, in fact and actually. Each chapter has
a clear introduction and conclusion.
|
|