Buch, Englisch, Band 36, 333 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 708 g
Reihe: Language and Computers
Papers from the Twenty First International Conference on English Language Research on Computerized Corpora Sydney 2000
Buch, Englisch, Band 36, 333 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 708 g
Reihe: Language and Computers
ISBN: 978-90-420-1237-0
Verlag: Brill | Rodopi
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Pam PETERS, Peter COLLINS and Adam SMITH: Introduction. New corporation and new speech communities. Magnar BREKKE: TERMINEC: a clearinghouse for economics text and terminology. Neil DRAVE: Vaguely speaking: a corpus approach to vague language in intercultural conversions. He ANPING: On the discourse marker so. Tony MCENERY, Paul BAKER and Christine CHEEPEN: Lexis, indirectness and politeness in operator calls. David MINUGH: The Coll Corpus: towards a corpus of web-based college student newspapers. Vincent OOI: Aspects of computer-mediated communication for research in corpus linguistics. Nelleke OOSTDIJK: The design of the Spoken Dutch Corpus. Historical and regional studies. Maurizio GOTTI: Canting terms in the Early English Prose Fiction Corpus. Sebastian HOFFMANN: In (hot) pursuit of data: complex prepositions in late modern English. Christine JOHANSSON: Pied piping and stranding from a diachronic perspective. Hans-Martin LEHMANN: Zero subject relative constructions in American and British English. Manfred MARKUS: Towards an analysis of pragmatic and stylistic features in 15th and 17th century English letters. Peter SCHNEIDER: Computer assisted spelling normalization of 18th century English. Corpus-based language description. Pieter DE HAAN: Whom is not dead? Roberta FACCHINETTI: Can and could in contemporary British English: a study of the ICE-GB corpus. Janet HOLMES and Robert SIGLEY: What’s a word like girl doing in a place like this? Occupational labels, sexist usages and corpus research. Göran KJELLMER: On polysemy and interpretation. The case of eventual. Ilka MINDT: Functions of intonation in sentences and texts. Paul RAYSON, Andrew WILSON and Geoffrey LEECH: Grammatical word class variation within the British National Corpus Samples. Norbert SCHLÜTER: Temporal specification of the present perfect: a corpus-based study. Nicholas SMITH: Ever moving on? The progressive in recent British English.