Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory : : Papers from the Twentieth International Conference on English Language Research on Computerized Corpora (ICAME 20) Freiburg im Breisgau 1999 / / edited by Christian Mair, Marianne Hundt.

From being the occupation of a marginal (and frequently marginalised) group of researchers, the linguistic analysis of machine-readable language corpora has moved to the mainstream of research on the English language. In this process an impressive body of results has accumulated which, over and abov...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Language and Computers ; 33
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden; , Boston : : BRILL,, 2000.
Year of Publication:2000
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Language and Computers ; 33.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
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Table of Contents:
  • MAIR/HUNDT: Introduction
  • Bas AARTS : Corpus linguistics, Chomsky and Fuzzy Tree Fragments
  • Bengt ALTENBERG and Karin AIJMER: The English-Swedish Parallel Corpus: a resource for contrastive research and translation studies
  • Ylva BERGLUND: Gonna and going to in the spoken component of the British National Corpus
  • Sylvie DE COCK: Repetitive phrasal chunkiness and advanced EFL speech and writing
  • Pieter DE HAAN: Tagging non-native English with the TOSCA-ICLE tagger
  • Inge DE MONNINK: Parsing a learner corpus?
  • Jürgen ESSER: Corpus linguistics and the linguistic sign
  • Maria ESTLING: Competition in the wastebasket: A study of constructions with all, both and half
  • Roberta FACCHINETTI: Be able to in Present-day British English
  • Angela HAHN, Sabine REICH and Josef SCHMIED : Aspect in the Chemnitz Internet Grammar
  • Janet HOLMES: Ladies and gentlemen: corpus analysis and linguistic sexism
  • Gunther KALTENBöCK: It -extraposition and non-extraposition in English discourse
  • Thomas KOHNEN: Corpora and speech acts: The study of performatives
  • Uta LENK: Stabilized expressions in spoken discourse: Worth our time?
  • H. LINDQUIST, M. LEVIN: Apples and oranges: On comparing data from different corpora
  • Manfred MARKUS: Wherefore therefore : Causal connectives in Middle English prose as opposed to Present Day English
  • Oliver MASON: A developer's view of corpus linguistics: The CUE system
  • Anneli MEURMAN-SOLIN: Prepositional ditransitive types of verb complementation
  • Ilka MINDT: Prosodic cues at speaker turns
  • Tore NILSSON: Noun Phrases in British Travel Texts
  • Nelleke OOSTDIJK: Towards a model for the description of language use
  • Minna PALANDER-COLLIN: The language of husbands and wives in seventeenth-century correspondence
  • Pam PETERS: Paradigm Split
  • Norbert SCHLÜTER: The present perfect in British and American English: selected results of an empirical analysis
  • Kristina SCHNEIDER: Popular and Quality Papers in the Rostock Historical Newspaper Corpus
  • Paul SKANDERA: Research into idioms and the International Corpus of English
  • Mikael SVENSSON: Sentence openings and textual progression in English and Swedish
  • Bernadette VINE: Getting things done: Some practical issues in a functional investigation of directives in spoken extracts from the New Zealand and British components of the International Corpus of English
  • Terry WALKER: The choice of second person singular pronouns in authentic and constructed dialogue in late sixteenth century English
  • Keith WILLIAMSON: Lexico-grammatical Tags and the Phonetic and Syntactic Analysis of Medieval Texts.