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Collocational processing in L1 and L2:The effects of word Frequency, collocational frequency, and association
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2
Corpus Linguistics and Clinical Psychology:Investigating 'personification' in first-person accounts of voice-hearing
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3
Slavery and Britain in the 19th century
McEnery, Anthony; Baker, Helen; Brezina, Vaclav. - : John Benjamins, 2021
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4
Words that matter in L2 research and pedagogy:A corpus-linguistics perspective
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5
Learner corpus research : new perspectives and applications
Brezina, Vaclav (Herausgeber); Flowerdew, Lynne (Herausgeber). - Sydney : Bloomsbury Academic, 2019
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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6
Morphological complexity in written L2 texts
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7
Functional variation in the Spoken BNC2014 and the potential for register analysis
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8
Erik Castello, Katherine Ackerley and Francesca Coccetta (Eds.), Studies in Learner Corpus Linguistics Research and Applications for Foreign Language Teaching and Assessment
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9
The Trinity Lancaster Corpus:Applications in language teaching and materials development
Gablasova, Dana; Brezina, Vaclav; McEnery, Anthony. - : John Benjamins, 2019
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10
Corpus Linguistics, learner corpora and SLA:employing technology to analyze language use
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11
The Trinity Lancaster Corpus:Development, Description and Application
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12
Usage Fluctuation Analysis:A new way of analysing shifts in historical discourse
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13
Corpus approaches to contemporary British speech : sociolinguistic studies of the spoken BNC2014
Aijmer, Karin (Herausgeber); Love, Robbie (Herausgeber); Brezina, Vaclav (Herausgeber). - London : Routledge, 2018
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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14
Short introductions to corpus-based sociolinguistics and the BNC2014
In: Corpus approaches to contemporary British speech. - New York : Routledge (2018), 1-30
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15
Collocation Graphs and Networks:Selected Applications
Brezina, Vaclav. - : Springer, 2018
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16
Statistics in Corpus Linguistics:A Practical Guide
Brezina, Vaclav. - : Cambridge University Press, 2018
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17
Politeness Variation in England:A North-South Divide?
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18
Spoken British National Corpus 2014
McEnery, Anthony; Love, Robbie; Hardie, Andrew John. - : Department of Linguistics and Modern English Language, Lancaster University. UK, 2018
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19
#LancsBox v. 4.x
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20
The Dative Alternation Revisited: Fresh Insights from Contemporary Spoken Data
McGillivray, Barbara; Jenset, Gard; Rundell, Michael. - : Routledge, 2018. : Corpus Approaches to Contemporary British Speech: Sociolinguistic Studies of the Spoken BNC2014, 2018
Abstract: A well-known feature of English grammar is the dative alternation, whereby a verb may be used in a V-NP-NP construction (Give me the money) or with a prepositional phrase in the pattern V-NP-PP, typically with the preposition to (Give the money to me). In this study, we use data from the Early-Access Subset (EAS) of the Spoken British National Corpus 2014 to investigate the behaviour of six high-frequency verbs whose argument structure preferences include the dative alternation. Given that speakers have both patterns available to them, our goal is to discover whether the choice of pattern is motivated rather than random — and if so, what factors influenced that choice. Although the dative alternation is a well-researched topic, most published work draws either on introspection or on data from written sources. Using contemporary unscripted spoken text from face-to-face conversations takes us into new territory, especially as the linguistic data in the EAS corpus are complemented by a wide range of sociolinguistic information on participating speakers. By “sociolinguistic information” we mean the social phenomena that co-occur with linguistic variables (Bayley 2002, 118). This represents a powerful new research resource, and in this chapter we show how it yields new insights into the use of the dative alternation.
Keyword: corpus; dative alternation; spoken BNC
URL: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.70774
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/323317
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