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Academic texts in motion: a text history study of co-authorship interactions in writing
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Helping EAL academics navigate asymmetrical power relations in co-authorship: research-based materials for ERPP workshops
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Exploring polysemy in the Academic Vocabulary List: a lexicographic study
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Exploring polysemy in the Academic Vocabulary List: a lexicographic study
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Academic vocabulary in an EAP course: Opportunities for incidental learning from printed teaching materials developed in-house.
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Exploring polysemy in the Academic Vocabulary List: A lexicographic approach
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Abstract:
The Academic Vocabulary List (AVL) (Gardner & Davies, 2014) is a valuable resource for EAP teachers and students as it identifies potential lexical learning/teaching targets. This study enhances the AVL's pedagogical usefulness by identifying polysemous lemmas in it. Polysemous AVL lemmas are operationalised as those with more than one definition in two lexicographic resources, the Collins COBUILD Advanced Learners' Dictionary and WordNet. This study also examines a theoretical issue, the relationship between the number of meaning senses of AVL lemmas and their frequency in an academic-English corpus. To this end, correlations were calculated between the numbers of AVL lemmas' meaning definitions listed in both lexicographic resources and their frequency in the COCA-Academic corpus. 34.38% of the 2673 AVL lemmas included in both lexicographic resources, excluding homonyms, are polysemous. Most (66.05%) come from the most frequent 1000 AVL lemmas. The number of meaning definitions of AVL lemmas and their frequency are positively correlated. This correlation is non-linear, i.e., low-frequency words tend to be monosemous but beyond a frequency threshold, word definitions increase as word frequency increases. Implications for future research and teaching are discussed.
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URL: http://repository.essex.ac.uk/30956/3/Skoufaki_Petric_JEAP_accepted.pdf http://repository.essex.ac.uk/30956/ https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeap.2021.101038
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Academic socialisation through collaboration: textual interventions in supporting exiled scholars’ academic literacies development
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Adaptive master's dissertation supervision: a longitudinal case study
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Helping international master’s students navigate dissertation supervision: research-informed discussion and awareness-raising activities
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Love and enjoyment in context: four case studies of adolescent EFL learners
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Experiencing Master’s supervision: perspectives of international students and their supervisors
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Editorial: selected papers from the 8th conference of the European Association for the Teaching of Academic Writing
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What next for research on plagiarism? Continuing the dialogue
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