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Corpus linguistics : readings in a widening discipline / edited by Geoffrey Sampson and Diana McCarthy.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Open linguistics seriesLondon : Continuum, 2005Edition: Paperback edDescription: xiv, 524 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 082648803X
  • 9780826488039
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 22 410.285 COR
Contents:
1. Introduction -- 2. From The Structure of English (1952) Charles Carpenter Fries -- 3. A Standard Corpus of Edited Present -day American English (1965) W. Nelson Francis -- 4. On the Distribution of Noun-phrase Types in English Clause-structure (1971) F.G.A.M. Aarts -- 5. Predicting Text Segmentation into Tone Units (1986) Bengt Altenberg -- 6. Typicality and Meaning Potentials (1986) Patrick Hanks -- 7. Historical Drift in Three English Genres (1987) Douglas Biber and Edward; Finegan -- 8. Corpus Creation (1987) John Sinclair -- 9. Cleft and Pseudo-cleft Constructions in English Spoken and Written Discourse (1987) Peter C. Collins -- 10. What is Wrong with Adding One? (1989) William Gale and Kenneth Church -- 11. A Statistical Approach to Machine Translation (1990) Peter F. Brown, et al. -- 12. A Point of Verb Syntax in South-western British English: An Analysis of a Dialect Continuum (1991) Ossl lhalainen -- 13. Using Corpus Data in the Swedish Academy Grammar (1991) Staffan Hellberg -- 14. On the History of That/Zero as Object Clause Links in English (1991) Matti Rissanen -- 15. Encoding the British National Corpus (1992) Gavin Burnage and Dominic Dunlop -- 16. Computer Corpora - What Do They Tell Us about Culture? (1992) Geoffrey Leech and Roger Fallon -- 17. Representativeness in Corpus Design (1992) Douglas Biber -- 18. A Corpus-driven Approach to Grammar: Principles, Methods and Examples (1993) Gill Francis -- 19. Structural Ambiguity and Lexical Relations (1993) Donald Hindle and Mats Rooth -- 20. Irony in the Text or Insincerity in the Writer? The Diagnostic Potential of Semantic Prosodies (1993) William Louw -- 21. Building a Large Annotated Corpus of English: The Penn Treebank (1993) Mitchell P. Marcus, et al. -- 22. Automatically Extracting Collocations from Corpora for Language Learning (1994) Kenji Kita, et al. -- 23. Developing and Evaluating a Probabilistic LR Parser of Part-of-Speech and Punctuation Labels (1995) E.J. Briscoe and J.A. Carroll -- 24. Why a Fiji Corpus? (1996) Jan Tent and France Mugler -- 25. Treebank Grammars (1996) Eugene Charniak -- 26. English Corpus Linguistics and the Foreign Language Teaching Syliabus (1996) Dieter Mindt -- 27. Data-oriented Language Processing: An Overview (1996) L.W.M. Bod and R.J.H. Scha -- 28. Conflict Talk: A Comparison of the Verbal Disputes between Adolescent Females in Two Corpora (1996) Ingrid Kristine Hasund and Anna-Brita Stenstrom -- 29. Assessing Agreement on Classification Tasks: The Kappa Statistic (1996) Jean Carletta -- 30. Linguistic and Interactional Features of Internet Relay Chat (1996) Christopher C. Werry -- 31. Distinguishing Systems and Distinguishing Senses: New Evaluation Methods for Word Sense Disambiguation (1997) Philip Resnik and David Yarowsky -- 32. Qualification and Certainty in L1 and L2 Students' Writing (1997) Kenneth Hyland and John Milton -- 33. Analysing and Predicting Patterns of DAMSL Utterance Tags (1998) Mark G. Core -- 34. Assessing Claims about Language Use with Corpus Data - Swearing and Abuse (1998) Anthony McEnery, et al. -- 35. The Syntax of Disfluency in Spontaneous Spoken Language (1998) David McKelvie -- 36. The Use of Large Text Corpora for Evaluating Text-to-Text Speech Systems (1998) Louis C.W. Pols et al. -- 37. The Prague Dependency Treebank: How Much of the Underlying Syntactic Structure can be Tagged Automaticaly? (1999) Alena Bohmova and Eva Hajicova -- 38. Reflections of a Dendrographer (1999) Geoffrey Sampson -- 39. A Generic Approach to Software Support for Linguistic Annotation Using XML (2000) Jean Carletta, et al. -- 40. Europe's Ignored Languages (2001) Anthony McEnery -- 41. Semi-automatic Tagging of Intonation in French Spoken Corpora (2001) Estelle Campione and Jean Veronis -- 42. Web as Corpus (2001) Adam Kilgarriff -- 43. Intonational Variation in the British Isles (2002) Esther Grabe and Brechtje Post
Summary: These days, corpora are being used to advance nearly every aspect of language study, from computer processing techniques to literary stylistics and improved language-teaching methods. This title seeks to provide a complete catalogue of a given language, and to use this data to test language hypotheses.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book - Borrowing Book - Borrowing Central Library Second Floor Baccah 410.285 COR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 26103 Available 000033490
Total holds: 0

Papers, some rev., previously published in various sources, 1952-2002.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. Introduction -- 2. From The Structure of English (1952) Charles Carpenter Fries -- 3. A Standard Corpus of Edited Present -day American English (1965) W. Nelson Francis -- 4. On the Distribution of Noun-phrase Types in English Clause-structure (1971) F.G.A.M. Aarts -- 5. Predicting Text Segmentation into Tone Units (1986) Bengt Altenberg -- 6. Typicality and Meaning Potentials (1986) Patrick Hanks -- 7. Historical Drift in Three English Genres (1987) Douglas Biber and Edward; Finegan -- 8. Corpus Creation (1987) John Sinclair -- 9. Cleft and Pseudo-cleft Constructions in English Spoken and Written Discourse (1987) Peter C. Collins -- 10. What is Wrong with Adding One? (1989) William Gale and Kenneth Church -- 11. A Statistical Approach to Machine Translation (1990) Peter F. Brown, et al. -- 12. A Point of Verb Syntax in South-western British English: An Analysis of a Dialect Continuum (1991) Ossl lhalainen -- 13. Using Corpus Data in the Swedish Academy Grammar (1991) Staffan Hellberg -- 14. On the History of That/Zero as Object Clause Links in English (1991) Matti Rissanen -- 15. Encoding the British National Corpus (1992) Gavin Burnage and Dominic Dunlop -- 16. Computer Corpora - What Do They Tell Us about Culture? (1992) Geoffrey Leech and Roger Fallon -- 17. Representativeness in Corpus Design (1992) Douglas Biber -- 18. A Corpus-driven Approach to Grammar: Principles, Methods and Examples (1993) Gill Francis -- 19. Structural Ambiguity and Lexical Relations (1993) Donald Hindle and Mats Rooth -- 20. Irony in the Text or Insincerity in the Writer? The Diagnostic Potential of Semantic Prosodies (1993) William Louw -- 21. Building a Large Annotated Corpus of English: The Penn Treebank (1993) Mitchell P. Marcus, et al. -- 22. Automatically Extracting Collocations from Corpora for Language Learning (1994) Kenji Kita, et al. -- 23. Developing and Evaluating a Probabilistic LR Parser of Part-of-Speech and Punctuation Labels (1995) E.J. Briscoe and J.A. Carroll -- 24. Why a Fiji Corpus? (1996) Jan Tent and France Mugler -- 25. Treebank Grammars (1996) Eugene Charniak -- 26. English Corpus Linguistics and the Foreign Language Teaching Syliabus (1996) Dieter Mindt -- 27. Data-oriented Language Processing: An Overview (1996) L.W.M. Bod and R.J.H. Scha -- 28. Conflict Talk: A Comparison of the Verbal Disputes between Adolescent Females in Two Corpora (1996) Ingrid Kristine Hasund and Anna-Brita Stenstrom -- 29. Assessing Agreement on Classification Tasks: The Kappa Statistic (1996) Jean Carletta -- 30. Linguistic and Interactional Features of Internet Relay Chat (1996) Christopher C. Werry -- 31. Distinguishing Systems and Distinguishing Senses: New Evaluation Methods for Word Sense Disambiguation (1997) Philip Resnik and David Yarowsky -- 32. Qualification and Certainty in L1 and L2 Students' Writing (1997) Kenneth Hyland and John Milton -- 33. Analysing and Predicting Patterns of DAMSL Utterance Tags (1998) Mark G. Core -- 34. Assessing Claims about Language Use with Corpus Data - Swearing and Abuse (1998) Anthony McEnery, et al. -- 35. The Syntax of Disfluency in Spontaneous Spoken Language (1998) David McKelvie -- 36. The Use of Large Text Corpora for Evaluating Text-to-Text Speech Systems (1998) Louis C.W. Pols et al. -- 37. The Prague Dependency Treebank: How Much of the Underlying Syntactic Structure can be Tagged Automaticaly? (1999) Alena Bohmova and Eva Hajicova -- 38. Reflections of a Dendrographer (1999) Geoffrey Sampson -- 39. A Generic Approach to Software Support for Linguistic Annotation Using XML (2000) Jean Carletta, et al. --
40. Europe's Ignored Languages (2001) Anthony McEnery --
41. Semi-automatic Tagging of Intonation in French Spoken Corpora (2001) Estelle Campione and Jean Veronis --
42. Web as Corpus (2001) Adam Kilgarriff -- 43. Intonational Variation in the British Isles (2002) Esther Grabe and Brechtje Post

These days, corpora are being used to advance nearly every aspect of language study, from computer processing techniques to literary stylistics and improved language-teaching methods. This title seeks to provide a complete catalogue of a given language, and to use this data to test language hypotheses.

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