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1

Zottola, Angela. "Transgender identity labels in the British press." Journal of Language and Sexuality 7, no. 2 (2018): 237–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jls.17017.zot.

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Abstract This contribution focuses on the linguistic representation of transgender people in the British press, through the analysis of a corpus of newspaper articles collected between 2013 and 2015. Within the framework of Queer Linguistics and Corpus-based Discourse Analysis, this study analyses the linguistic choices retraceable in the corpus under investigation, conveying a given representation of transgender individuals as social subjects. The analysis focuses on naming strategies and the collective representation of transgender identities.
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Toirova, Guli Ibragimovna. "THE IMPORTANCE OF LINGUISTIC MODELS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF LANGUAGE BASES GE BASE." Scientific Reports of Bukhara State University 4, no. 6 (2020): 98–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.52297/2181-1466/2020/4/6/8.

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Relevance. In Uzbek linguistics, a number of studies have been carried out on automatic translation, the development of the linguistic foundations of the author's corpus, the processing of lexicographic texts and linguistic-statistical analysis. However, the processing of the Uzbek language as the language of the Internet: spelling, automatic processing and translation programs, search programs for various characters, text generation, the linguistic basis of the text corpus and national corpus, the technology of its software is not studied in any monograph. The article discusses such problems
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Seidl-Péch, Olívia. "Zu theoretischen und praktischen Aspekten des Fachübersetzens." Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Philologica 9, no. 3 (2017): 135–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ausp-2017-0034.

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AbstractIn the past few decades, it has extensively been written about corpus linguistics, which has owned its upswing mainly to the use of electronic corpora since the 1960s (Brown Corpus). Meanwhile, an increasing number of fields within general and applied linguistics (e.g. computational linguistics, discourse analysis, contrastive linguistics, diachronic and synchronic linguistics, language teaching and learning research, lexicology and lexicography, psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, translation studies) have been using corpus linguistic methods. In linguistic research, the empirical an
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Bogetić, Ksenija. "MetaLangCORP: Presenting The First Corpus Of Media Metalanguage In Slovene, Croatian And Serbian, And Its Cross-Discipline Applicability." Fluminensia 33, no. 1 (2021): 123–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.31820/f.33.1.7.

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Growing interest in meta-language, in linguistics and other disciplines, has highlighted a gap in metalanguage corpora and analytical resources, which remain among the scarcest in corpus-linguistic developments so far. This paper is aimed at making a step towards filling this gap, both by presenting our own metalanguage corpus resource and using it in a short sample analysis to discuss the applications of such resources in linguistics and social sciences. Specifically, the paper presents for the first time MetaLangCORP, a multi-element corpus of contemporary media metalanguage in languages of
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Aarts, Jan, Hans van Halteren, and Nelleke Oostdijk. "The Linguistic Annotation of Corpora." International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 3, no. 2 (1998): 189–210. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.3.2.02aar.

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The article discusses the role of linguistic annotation in corpus linguistics as opposed to annotation in natural language processing. In corpus linguistics, annotation is an integral part of the process of linguistic interpretation and description of the data. Tagging and parsing are discussed as the automatic counterparts of, respectively, the paradigmatic and the syntagmatic description of corpus data. The requirements for a corpus linguistic annotation system are considered. An account is given of the TOSCA analysis system as representative of such an annotation system. Performance results
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Salway, Andrew, and James Baker. "Investigating Curatorial Voice with Corpus Linguistic Techniques." Museum and Society 18, no. 2 (2020): 151–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.29311/mas.v18i2.3175.

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We seek to demonstrate how corpus linguistic techniques can facilitate a comprehensive account of curatorial voice in a large digitised museum catalogue and hence leverage its value as a resource for generating new knowledge about: curatorial practice; the historical and cultural contexts of curation; and, the content of collections. We worked with 1.1 million words written by the historian M. Dorothy George between 1930 and 1954 to describe 9330 late-Georgian satirical prints. George’s curatorial descriptions were analysed in terms of their typical informational content and with regards to th
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Fischer-Starcke, Bettina. "Keywords and frequent phrases of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice." International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 14, no. 4 (2009): 492–523. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.14.4.03fis.

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Corpus linguistic analyses reveal meanings and structural features of data, that cannot be detected intuitively. This has been amply demonstrated with regard to non-fiction data, but fiction texts have only rarely been analysed by corpus linguistic techniques. This is the case even though it has been shown by previous analyses that corpus stylistic analyses reveal literary meanings of the data that are left undetected by the intuitive analyses of literary criticism. The analysis of the keywords and most frequent phrases of Jane Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice presented in this article confi
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Motschenbacher, Heiko. "Corpus linguistics in language and sexuality studies." Journal of Language and Sexuality 7, no. 2 (2018): 145–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jls.17019.mot.

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Abstract As an introduction to the special issue, this paper presents an overview of previous corpus linguistic work in the field of language and sexuality and discusses the compatibility of corpus linguistic methodology with queer linguistics as a central theoretical approach in language and sexuality studies. The discussion is structured around five prototypical aspects of corpus linguistics that may be deemed problematic from a poststructuralist, queer linguistic perspective: quantification and associated notions of objectivity, reliance on linguistic forms and formal presence, concentratio
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Chilingaryan, Kamo P. "Corpus Linguistics: Theory Vs Methodilogy." RUDN Journal of Language Studies, Semiotics and Semantics 12, no. 1 (2021): 196–218. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2313-2299-2021-12-1-196-218.

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The article is devoted to a comprehensive study of the stages of formation and development of corpus linguistics. The purpose of the article is to analyze various scientific approaches to the scientific significance of this linguistic discipline and identify a set of concepts and criteria that form the foundation of this field. Corpus linguistics is one of the most promising and rapidly developing areas of language research. Linguistics of the XIX century set as its goal the study of language as such, and linguistics of the XXI century sees the relevance of the research not in identifying abso
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BIBER, D. "Methodological Issues Regarding Corpus-based Analyses of Linguistic Variation." Literary and Linguistic Computing 5, no. 4 (1990): 257–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/llc/5.4.257.

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Tseng, Shu-Chuan. "Syllable Contractions in a Mandarin Conversational Dialogue Corpus." International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 10, no. 1 (2005): 63–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.10.1.04tse.

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The issue of processing and understanding spontaneous speech interests speech engineers and linguists, because spontaneous speech is the most natural and the most frequent form of language used for communication. However, the lack of well-defined databases of spontaneous speech prohibits the scale and the depth of spontaneous speech research to a great extent. By using the methodology of corpus linguistics, this paper shows that linguistic theories can be examined, approved or disproved by quantitative empirical analyses. The studies introduced in this paper contain a pioneering work on corpus
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BIBER, DOUGLAS, RANDI REPPEN, and SUSAN CONRAD. "Developing linguistic literacy: perspectives from corpus linguistics and multi-dimensional analysis." Journal of Child Language 29, no. 2 (2002): 449–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305000902235345.

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In their conceptual framework for linguistic literacy development, Ravid & Tolchinsky synthesize research studies from several perspectives. One of these is corpus-based research, which has been used for several large-scale research studies of spoken and written registers over the past 20 years. In this approach, a large, principled collection of natural texts (a ‘corpus’) is analysed using computational and interactive techniques, to identify the salient linguistic characteristics of each register or text variety. Three characteristics of corpus-based analysis are particularly important (
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Biber, Douglas. "Investigating Language Use Through Corpusbased Analyses of Association Patterns." International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 1, no. 2 (1996): 171–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.1.2.02bib.

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The present paper argues that analyses of language use provide an important complementary perspective to traditional linguistic descriptions, and that empirical approaches are required for such investigations. Corpus-based techniques are particularly well suited to these research purposes, enabling investigation of research questions that were previously disregarded. Specifically, the paper discusses the use of corpus-based techniques to identify and analyze complex "association patterns": the systematic ways in which linguistic features are used in association with other linguistic and non-li
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Zolotov, Pitirim Y. "Linguodidactic properties of corpus technologies." Tambov University Review. Series: Humanities, no. 185 (2020): 75–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.20310/1810-0201-2020-25-185-75-82.

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For the last two decades, corpus technologies, understood as a combination of means and methods of processing and analyzing data of electronic linguistic corpora, as a type of information and communication technology, have attracted great interest of researchers and teachers of foreign languages.We explain the concepts of corpus linguistics, corpus technology, linguistic corpus, concordance. The methods of studying case technologies, which are an annotation, abstraction, and analysis, are considered. The advantages of linguistic corpora are given. The history of the emergence and development o
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Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk, Barbara. "Comparing languages and cultures: Parametrization of analytic criteria." Russian Journal of Linguistics 25, no. 2 (2021): 343–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2687-0088-2021-25-2-343-368.

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The focus of the paper is to present arguments in favour of a complex set of areas of reference in cross-linguistic analyses of meanings, aimed in particular at the identification of a set of relevant analytic criteria to perform such a comparison. The arguments are based on lexicographic and corpus linguistic data and specifically on the polysemic concept of integrity in English and its lexical counterparts in Polish. It is generally assumed in Cognitive Linguistics, which is taken as the basic framework of the present study, that meanings, which are defined as convention-based conceptualizat
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Coimbra-Gomes, Elvis, and Heiko Motschenbacher. "Language, normativity, and sexual orientation obsessive-compulsive disorder (SO-OCD): A corpus-assisted discourse analysis." Language in Society 48, no. 4 (2019): 565–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047404519000423.

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AbstractThis article presents a case study of the discursive construction of sexual orientation obsessive-compulsive disorder (SO-OCD) as it surfaces in posts to an online mental health forum. SO-OCD is an anxiety disorder that involves having unwanted, intrusive thoughts as a consequence of conflict with normative sexual beliefs. The study focuses on the way normativity regulates communication about sexual identities, desires, and practices in a corpus of online posts by heterosexual men who pathologically doubt their sexual identity. Drawing on quantitative and qualitative corpus linguistic
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Wild, Kate, Andrew Church, Diana McCarthy, and Jacquelin Burgess. "Quantifying lexical usage: vocabulary pertaining to ecosystems and the environment." Corpora 8, no. 1 (2013): 53–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cor.2013.0034.

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A recent development in corpus linguistics has been the integration of critical discourse methodologies, which allow in-depth contextual and qualitative analyses, with corpus linguistic methodologies, which allow broader quantitative analyses. Our study is a contribution to this approach. We present the methods used in a study of vocabulary pertaining to the environment, undertaken as part of the UK National Ecosystem Assessment. A clear and replicable methodology was developed and applied to three custom-built specialised web corpora and a reference web corpus; automatic analysis of collocati
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Neumann, Stella. "Cross-linguistic register studies." Languages in Contrast 14, no. 1 (2014): 35–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/lic.14.1.03neu.

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This paper discusses register as a meaningful unit of contrastive linguistics and translation studies. Drawing on systemic functional register theory, it categorizes different approaches to register-oriented cross-linguistic studies emphasizing either the comparison of contrasted features organized by register or that of registers using features as operationalizations. The approach is exemplified with the help of sample analyses of the English-German CroCo Corpus, a corpus containing originals and translations from eight different registers. In order to account for the systematic contrastive d
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Motschenbacher, Heiko. "A corpus linguistic study of the situatedness of English pop song lyrics." Corpora 11, no. 1 (2016): 1–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cor.2016.0083.

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This study uses corpus linguistic methods to investigate how the situatedness of pop song lyrics may affect their linguistic make-up. For this purpose, I compare a corpus of Eurovision lyrics (ESC-ENG) to a general pop lyrics corpus (G-Charts) which is used as a reference corpus. This is done to detect specificities of the Eurovision lyrics, which can be related to the contextual salience of Europeanness in the Eurovision Song Contest. The major focus is on semantic keyness analyses carried out with the help of Wmatrix. These analyses highlight semantic fields that occur unusually frequently o
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Sullivan, Karen. "If you study a word do you use it more often? Lexical repetition priming in a corpus of Natural Semantic Metalanguage publications." Corpora 10, no. 3 (2015): 277–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cor.2015.0078.

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Psycholinguistic and corpus studies have shown that syntactic repetition priming can influence linguistic analyses. The impact of lexical repetition priming on linguistic work, on the other hand, has not been assessed. The current study finds evidence of lexical priming in a corpus of linguistics publications on the Natural Semantic Metalanguage (NSM), in which semantic analyses are written using several dozen ‘semantic primitives’ such as something, know and place. NSM theorists are repeatedly exposed to a small set of words, much like subjects in lexical repetition priming experiments. When
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Gredel, Eva. "Itis-Kombinatorik auf den Diskussionsseiten der Wikipedia: Ein Wortbildungsmuster zur diskursiven Normierung in der kollaborativen Wissenskonstruktion." Zeitschrift für Angewandte Linguistik 68, no. 1 (2018): 35–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zfal-2018-0003.

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AbstractThis paper presents a corpus study of talk pages on Wikipedia combining morphologic and discourse linguistics approaches. The study reveals that –itis is a highly productive suffix in meta(-linguistic) discourses of the online-encyclopaedia: Wikipedia authors using word formation products with the suffix –itis (e. g. Newstickeritis or WhatsAppitis) try to standardise the collaborative knowledge production with the help of these linguistic innovations. The corpus analysis delivers evidence for the fact that certain linguistic innovations and special types of word formation characterise
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Šimková, Mária. "Synchrónna Dynamika Slov Zakončených Na -Izmus/-Stvo V Textoch Slovenského Národného Korpusu." Journal of Linguistics/Jazykovedný casopis 69, no. 3 (2018): 560–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/jazcas-2019-0032.

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Abstract The paper focuses on the analysis of functioning of words with suffix -izmus/-stvo in contemporary Slovak texts. The source of the analysis is the Slovak National Corpus – particularly the corpus of older texts (texts from 1955 to 1989), primary corpus (texts from 1955 to 2017, especially since 2000), and corpus of web texts (until 2017). The comparison of the frequency and collocations of the analysed words shows the dynamics of these microsystems in the language of the previous and the current period, and of partial linguistic analyses.
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Gemeinböck, Iris. "Representativeness in Corpora of Literary Texts: Introducing the C18P Project." Matlit Revista do Programa de Doutoramento em Materialidades da Literatura 4, no. 2 (2016): 29–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.14195/2182-8830_4-2_2.

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Currently there are very few specialised corpora of literary texts that are tailored to the needs of literary critics who are interested in corpus stylistic analyses of prose fiction. Many existing corpora including literary texts were compiled for linguistic research interests and are often unsuitable for corpus stylistic purposes. The paper addresses three of the main problems: the absence of labelling of the texts for literary genre, the use of extracts, and the prevalence of linguistic periodisation schemes. C18P is a corpus of prose fiction designed specifically to address these issues. I
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Conrad, Susan. "4. CORPUS LINGUISTIC APPROACHES FOR DISCOURSE ANALYSIS." Annual Review of Applied Linguistics 22 (March 2002): 75–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0267190502000041.

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This chapter provides an overview of approaches within corpus linguistics that address discourse-level phenomena. The shared characteristics of all corpus-based research are first reviewed. Then four major approaches are covered: (1) investigating characteristics associated with the use of a language feature, for example, analyzing the factors that affect the omission or retention of that in complement clauses; (2) examining the realizations of a particular function of language, such as describing all the constructions used in English to express stance; (3) characterizing a variety of language
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Luo, Ruifeng. "A Study on Chinese TALK Metaphor from Corpus-based Approach." Journal of Language Teaching and Research 9, no. 2 (2018): 346. http://dx.doi.org/10.17507/jltr.0902.16.

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Metaphor is a vitally important concept in Cognitive Linguistics and refers to the mapping from source domain to the target domain. It is the mapping from the concrete entity to the abstract one, through which we can understand the process of men’s mental cognition to handle abstract things through specific ones and has been researching by many linguistic scholars by means of traditional methods such as introspection. The Corpus method is a newly utilized and empirical method to conduct linguistic research and contains the language materials of real and the actual use of language, and corpus i
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Wu, Kan. "Using Corpus Methods to Triangulate Linguistic Analysis." Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies 39, no. 2 (2021): 225–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.2989/16073614.2020.1827961.

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Vessey, Rachelle. "Challenges in cross-linguistic corpus-assisted discourse studies." Corpora 8, no. 1 (2013): 1–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cor.2013.0032.

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In this paper, I present some of the challenges and benefits arising from the use of cross-linguistic (i.e., involving comparable, non-parallel corpora of different languages) corpus-assisted discourse studies. Since corpus linguistics and discourse analysis ultimately focus on ‘real’ language use rather than theoretically constructed examples, it follows that the content of a corpus will be as varied as the population it is intended to represent; and this is true to an even larger extent when the population is ethno-linguistically diverse. Data for corpus-assisted discourse studies (CADS) res
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Bednarek, Monika. "Investigating evaluation and news values in news items that are shared through social media." Corpora 11, no. 2 (2016): 227–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cor.2016.0093.

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The sharing of news through social media platforms is now a significant part of mainstream online media use and is an increasingly important consideration in journalism practice and production. This paper analyses the linguistic characteristics of online news sharing on Facebook, with a focus on evaluation and news values in a corpus of the 100 ‘most shared’ news items from ‘heritage’ English-language news media organisations. Analyses combine corpus linguistic techniques (semantic tagging, frequency analysis, concordancing) with manual, computer-aided annotation. The main focus is on discursi
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Horch, Stephanie. "Complementing corpus analysis with web-based experimentation in research on World Englishes." English World-Wide 40, no. 1 (2019): 24–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/eww.00021.hor.

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Abstract Usage-based research in linguistics has to a large extent relied on corpus data. However, a feature’s “failure to appear in even a very large corpus (such as the Web) is not evidence for ungrammaticality, nor is appearance evidence for grammaticality” (Schütze and Sprouse 2013: 29). It is therefore advisable to complement corpus-based analyses with experimental data, so as to (ideally) obtain converging evidence. This paper reviews reasons for combining corpus linguistic with psycholinguistic experimental methods, and demonstrates how research on varieties of English can profit from e
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Goldfarb, Neal. "The Use of Corpus Linguistics in Legal Interpretation." Annual Review of Linguistics 7, no. 1 (2021): 473–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-linguistics-050520-093942.

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Over the past decade, the idea of using corpus linguistics in legal interpretation has attracted interest on the part of judges, lawyers, and legal academics in the United States. This review provides an introduction to this nascent movement, which is generally referred to as Law and Corpus Linguistics (LCL). After briefly summarizing LCL's origin and development, I situate LCL within legal interpretation by discussing the legal concept of ordinary meaning, which establishes the framework within which LCL operates. Next, I situate LCL within linguistics by identifying the subfields that are mo
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Degano, Chiara. "Corpus linguistics and argumentation." Journal of Argumentation in Context 5, no. 2 (2016): 113–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jaic.5.2.01deg.

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This paper explores the viability of a synergy between corpus linguistics and the study of argumentation in context. While quantitative approaches to the study of discourse have been profitably integrated at the levels of lexico-grammar and syntax, more rarely has this been the case for higher levels of analysis such as argumentative structures. Such an approach would help identify those recurring patterns of argumentation that build up cumulatively, and which can only be identified in larger samples of discourse. In particular this paper concerns how the tools of corpus linguistics can be put
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O'donnell,, Matthew Brook, Mike Scott,, Michaela Mahlberg,, and Michael Hoey,. "Exploring text-initial words, clusters and concgrams in a newspaper corpus." Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory 8, no. 1 (2012): 73–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/cllt-2012-0004.

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AbstractThe notion of ‘textual colligation’ predicts that certain lexical items have a tendency to occur at particular points in a text, i.e. the beginning or end of texts, paragraphs or sentences. This paper describes new corpus-based methods developed to identify the profile of words, clusters (n-grams) and concgrams (non-contiguous patterns in variant order) in terms of their most common textual locations. Groups of co-occurring text-initial items are then analyzed in terms of their discourse function in relation to theories of newspaper structure. This analysis illustrates how methods from
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Sardinha, Tony Berber. "Metaphor and Corpus Linguistics." Revista Brasileira de Linguística Aplicada 11, no. 2 (2011): 329–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s1984-63982011000200004.

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In this paper, I look at four different aspects of metaphor research from a corpus linguistic perspective, namely: (1) the lexicogrammar of metaphors, which refers to the patterning of linguistic metaphor revealed by corpus analysis; (2) metaphor probabilities, which is a facet of metaphor that emerges from frequency-based studies of metaphor; (3) dimensions of metaphor variation, or the search for systematic parameters of variation in metaphor use across different registers; and (4) automated metaphor retrieval, which relates to the development of software to help identify metaphors in corpor
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Kopotev, Mikhail V. "SOME THOUGHTS ON CORPUS AND GENERAL LINGUISTICS." Philological Class 26, no. 2 (2021): 90–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.51762/1fk-2021-26-02-07.

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The article is devoted to a discussion of dominant approaches developed within the framework of Corpus Linguistics (CL) and their influence on the general theory of language. Based on the research co-authored with his colleagues, the author describes three approaches to linguistic research in CL. First, corpus-informed analysis assumes that the data collected in the corpus are used as a source of examples in a natural language. Second, corpus-based analysis presupposes that the data are examined not only qualitatively but also quantitatively. Third, corpus-driven analysis assumes that the rese
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Tarasheva, Elena. "Hate Speech or Divisive Language." Yearbook of the Department of Foreign Languages and Cultures 2 (June 16, 2020): 79–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.33919/flcy.19.2.5.

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The article analyses a specialized corpus of texts by a Bulgarian radio host to establish what language items qualify as hate speech. Definitions of hate speech are adapted from the political sphere and given a linguistic dimension within a framework of corpus-assisted critical discourse analysis. The concordances of key words in the corpus are searched for labelling, namecalling, denotation-shifting etc.
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Goulart, Larissa, Bethany Gray, Shelley Staples, et al. "Linguistic Perspectives on Register." Annual Review of Linguistics 6, no. 1 (2020): 435–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-linguistics-011718-012644.

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Language users change their written and spoken language according to the situational characteristics and communicative purpose of production—that is, according to the register being produced. Research on registers has focused on register description or patterns of register variation, on detailed analysis of individual linguistic features or an account for the use of a broad range of linguistic features, and on the distinction between written and spoken registers. In this review, we survey register studies according to the register being investigated: spoken, written, electronic/online, literar
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Mannoni, Michele. "On the Forms and Thorns of Linguistic Indeterminacy in Chinese Law." Comparative Legilinguistics 45, no. 1 (2021): 61–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/cl-2021-0004.

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Abstract This study addresses the different types and implications of linguistic indeterminacy in Chinese law. It firstly draws on the studies of scholars of different disciplines, such as linguistics and philosophy of language, to provide a taxonomy of indeterminacy in language. It then provides examples of each type, highlighting the implications in law and legal interpretation. It uses linguistic data from various texts, such as statutory laws and judgements, and analyses them with various methods, including discourse analysis and corpus linguistics. This study argues that when the language
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Da Silva Reis, Leidiani. "The reconstruction of discourse objects in Libras." Hesperia: Anuario de Filología Hispánica 22 (March 13, 2020): 81–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.35869/hafh.v22i0.1656.

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This work analyses the referential process performed by a deaf subject in Brazilian Sign Language (BSL) when facing the anaphoric occurrence in a textual cut from Brazilian Portuguese. Therefore, the methodology implemented hereby has had a qualitative nature. A parallel corpus has been compiled using ELAN (EUDICO–Linguistic Annotator) and following the theories of Corpus Linguistics. From all the referential categories contemplated in BSL, the anaphoric deictic has been the most instrumental strategy for conducting the referential chain of the language, e.g. the construction of the referent a
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Da Silva Reis, Leidiani. "The reconstruction of discourse objects in Libras." Hesperia: Anuario de Filología Hispánica 23 (March 13, 2020): 81–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.35869/hafh.v23i0.1656.

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This work analyses the referential process performed by a deaf subject in Brazilian Sign Language (BSL) when facing the anaphoric occurrence in a textual cut from Brazilian Portuguese. Therefore, the methodology implemented hereby has had a qualitative nature. A parallel corpus has been compiled using ELAN (EUDICO–Linguistic Annotator) and following the theories of Corpus Linguistics. From all the referential categories contemplated in BSL, the anaphoric deictic has been the most instrumental strategy for conducting the referential chain of the language, e.g. the construction of the referent a
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Oktavianti, Ikmi Nur. "Corpora: From theoretical linguistics to language teaching." UAD TEFL International Conference 2 (January 16, 2021): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.12928/utic.v2.5731.2019.

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Corpus has gained its popularity in linguistics over the past five decades, from the computerized storage of English language in Survey of English Usage in 1959 to the ongoing development of Corpus of Contemporary American English. Because of the huge size of actual language data compiled in corpora, many linguists and language teachers working with English language have benefited from them in linguistic research and teaching practice. Up to now, there are innumerable English online corpora recording data from various genres, modes, and regions as well as corpus tools to analyze self-compiled
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Mattioli, Virginia, and Karen McAuliffe. "A corpus-based study on opinions of advocates general of the court of justice of the European Union: changes in language and style." International Journal of Legal Discourse 6, no. 1 (2021): 87–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ijld-2021-2047.

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Abstract This paper presents a Corpus Linguistics study of lexical features in the Opinions of Advocates General (AGs) of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). Using an interdisciplinary approach, combining legal studies, corpus linguistics and translation studies theories, the study aims to compare the language of some AGs’ Opinions, before and after the introduction of changes in the CJEU’s linguistic regime relating to the language(s) in which Opinions are normally drafted. The results of the corpus linguistic analysis demonstrate that certain changes in the linguistic and styl
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Liberman, Mark Y. "Corpus Phonetics." Annual Review of Linguistics 5, no. 1 (2019): 91–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-linguistics-011516-033830.

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Semiautomatic analysis of digital speech collections is transforming the science of phonetics. Convenient search and analysis of large published bodies of recordings, transcripts, metadata, and annotations—up to three or four orders of magnitude larger than a few decades ago—have created a trend towards “corpus phonetics,” whose benefits include greatly increased researcher productivity, better coverage of variation in speech patterns, and crucial support for reproducibility. The results of this work include insights into theoretical questions at all levels of linguistic analysis, along with a
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Atkinson, Paul, and Ian N. Gregory. "Child Welfare in Victorian Newspapers: Corpus-Based Discourse Analysis." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 48, no. 2 (2017): 159–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh_a_01124.

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Corpus linguistics enables the analysis of patterns in large bodies of written material. The use of this approach to trace discourses about infant mortality in all of the text published by four newspapers in England and Wales between 1870 and 1900 detects systematic variations in views about infant welfare by locality. It also reveals some of the strengths and weaknesses inherent in interrogating digitized text with linguistic tools in historical research.
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Hantgan-Sonko, Abbie. "Crossroads Corpus creation: Design and case study." Yearbook of the Poznan Linguistic Meeting 3, no. 1 (2017): 1–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/yplm-2017-0009.

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Abstract This paper illustrates a methodological approach to the design of an annotated corpus using a case study of phonetic convergences and divergences by multilingual speakers in southwestern Senegal’s Casamance region. The newly compiled corpus contains approximately 183,000 annotations of multilingual, spoken data, gathered by eight researchers over a ten year span using methods ranging from structured lexical elicitation in controlled contexts to naturally occurring, multilingual conversations. The area from which the data were collected consists of three villages and their primary lang
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Almela, Ángela. "A Corpus-Based Study of Linguistic Deception in Spanish." Applied Sciences 11, no. 19 (2021): 8817. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/app11198817.

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In the last decade, fields such as psychology and natural language processing have devoted considerable attention to the automatization of the process of deception detection, developing and employing a wide array of automated and computer-assisted methods for this purpose. Similarly, another emerging research area is focusing on computer-assisted deception detection using linguistics, with promising results. Accordingly, in the present article, the reader is firstly provided with an overall review of the state of the art of corpus-based research exploring linguistic cues to deception as well a
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Freddi, Maria. "BLURRING THE LINES BETWEEN GENRES AND AUDIENCES: INTERACTION IN SCIENCE BLOGS." Discourse and Interaction 13, no. 2 (2020): 9–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/di2020-2-9.

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Science blogs have been attracting the attention of linguists, rhetoricians and communications scholars alike as the discourse of science becomes more and more influenced by new digital media and more scientists engage in the practice of blogging for the purposes of knowledge dissemination and public engagement. The paper analyses writer-reader interaction in a corpus of blogs maintained by individual scientists, considering both posts and comments. The analysis is corpus-driven to the extent that it harnesses corpus linguistic tools for frequency observations to detect language patterns of in
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Baker, Paul. "From gay language to normative discourse." Journal of Language and Sexuality 2, no. 2 (2013): 179–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jls.2.2.01bak.

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A corpus of abstracts from the Lavender Languages and Linguistics Conference was subjected to a diachronic keywords analysis in order to identify concepts which had either stayed in constant focus or became more or less popular over time.1 Patterns of change in the abstracts corpus were compared against the Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA) in order to identify the extent that linguistic practices around language and sexuality were reflected in wider society. The analysis found that conference presenters had gradually begun to frame their analyses around queer theory and were usin
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Reviers, Nina. "Studying the language of Dutch audio description." Translation and Translanguaging in Multilingual Contexts 4, no. 1 (2018): 178–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ttmc.00009.rev.

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Abstract The present paper aims to combine insights from Applied Linguistics, Corpus Linguistics, Multimodality Research and Audiovisual Translation Studies in order to explore language use in a specific form of audiovisual translation, namely Audio Description (AD) for the blind and visually impaired. It is said that the communicative function of ADs and their multimodal context have a significant influence on the lexical, grammatical and syntactical choices describers make. This article aims to uncover these idiosyncratic linguistic patterns by conducting a quantitative and qualitative analy
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Werner, Valentin. "Assessing hip-hop discourse: Linguistic realness and styling." Text & Talk 39, no. 5 (2019): 671–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/text-2019-2044.

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Abstract This study provides a corpus-linguistic take on hip-hop discourse (as represented in rap), relating to one of the most influential cultural mass movements to date. To this end, a custom-built corpus of lyrics by US-American rap artists (LYRAP) was compiled, containing performed hip-hop discourse over a 25-year period. This material is used to test the alignment of hip-hop discourse with African American English in terms of morphosyntax, and to determine the amount of styling present in the lyrics. In addition, a comparative perspective with pop lyrics (as represented in the LYPOP corp
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Oh, Taehwan. "Corpus linguistic analysis of prefix independence and substantiality." Language and Culture 16, no. 1 (2020): 229–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.18842/klaces.2020.16.1.229.

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