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Phraséologie et collocations
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 328

Phraséologie et collocations

Répondant au manque de consensus qui règne encore actuellement dans le domaine phraséologique, l'auteur propose de redéfinir ici les notions de phraséologie (ou figement) et de collocation (ou semi-figement), en réunissant les littératures de tradition anglo-saxonne et francophone. Le volet acquisitionnel de l'ouvrage se centre quant à lui sur les productions d'apprenants avancés du français langue étrangère (L2), en particulier sur les déviances au sein des collocations verbo-nominales, encore relativement peu étudiées en français L2. L'ouvrage présente en outre une méthode originale d'analyse paramétrique sur corpus (en L1 et en L2) qui permet, d'une part, de traduire en termes quantitatifs des données initialement qualitatives et, d'autre part, de combiner l'approche fonctionnelle (via des critères linguistiques) et statistique (via des mesures d'association lexicale) en phraséologie. Cette méthode est décrite avec soin par l'auteur qui guide le lecteur en l'impliquant dans sa démarche exploratoire au fil des pages.

Across the Line of Speech and Writing Variation
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 212

Across the Line of Speech and Writing Variation

The contributions in this volume follow the suggestion to consider discourse structure not only from the perspective of variation between the written and the spoken mode, but also from the perspective of variation on a continuum from formal to...

The Advanced Learner Variety
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 306

The Advanced Learner Variety

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2009
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  • Publisher: Peter Lang

This volume originates from a workshop entitled 'Revisiting advanced varieties in L2 learning' organized by the editors at Aston University (Birmingham, UK) in June 2006. It consists of a peer-reviewed selection of the best contributions. Many different approaches have been used in the study of advanced learners and their characteristics. Specific areas of language have repeatedly been found to remain problematic even at advanced levels, and much empirical research has been carried out. In particular, areas of grammar such as the tense or agreement systems often pose difficulties, as well as lexical idiosyncrasies such as formulaic sequences, and the discourse/pragmatic constraints operating...

Language, Dementia and Meaning Making
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 254

Language, Dementia and Meaning Making

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-05-07
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  • Publisher: Springer

This book investigates the ways in which context shapes how cognitive challenges and strengths are navigated and how these actions impact the self-esteem of individuals with dementia and their conversational partners. The author examines both the language used and face maintenance in everyday social interaction through the lens of epistemic discourse analysis. In doing so, this work reveals how changes in cognition may impact the faces of these individuals, leading some to feel ashamed, anxious, or angry, others to feel patronized, infantilized, or overly dependent, and still others to feel threatened in both ways. It further examines how discursive choices made by healthy interactional partners can minimize or exacerbate these feelings. This path-breaking work will provide important insights for students and scholars of sociolinguistics, applied linguistics, medical anthropology, and health communication.

The Phraseological View of Language
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 337

The Phraseological View of Language

This volume presents the results of the international symposium Chunks in Corpus Linguistics and Cognitive Linguistics, held at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg to honour John Sinclair's contribution to the development of linguistics in the second half of the twentieth century. The main theme of the book, highlighting important aspects of Sinclair's work, is the idiomatic character of language with a focus on chunks (in the sense of prefabricated items) as extended units of meaning. To pay tribute to Sinclair's enormous impact on research in this field, the volume contains two contributions which deal explicitly with his work, including material from unpublished manuscripts. Beyond that,...

Phraseology
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 452

Phraseology

Long regarded as a peripheral issue, phraseology is now taking centre stage in a wide range of fields. This recent explosion of interest undoubtedly has a great deal to do with the development of corpus linguistics research, which has both demonstrated the key role of phraseological expressions in language and provided researchers with automated methods of extraction and analysis. The aim of this volume is to take stock of current research in phraseology from a variety of perspectives: theoretical, descriptive, contrastive, cultural, lexicographic and computational. It contains overview chapters by leading experts in the field and a series of case studies focusing on a wide range of multiword units: collocations, similes, idioms, routine formulae and recurrent phrases. The volume is an invitation for experienced phraseologists to look at the field with different eyes and a useful introduction for the many researchers who are intrigued by phraseology but need help in finding their way in this rich but complex domain.

Sign Language Research, Uses and Practices
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 326

Sign Language Research, Uses and Practices

The uses and practices of sign languages are strongly related to scientific research on sign languages and vice versa. Conversely, sign linguistics cannot be separated from Deaf community practices, including practices in education and interpretation. Therefore, the current volume brings together work on sign language interpreting, the use of spoken and sign language with deaf children with cochlear implants and early language development in children exposed to both a spoken and sign language, and reports on recent research on aspects of sign language structure. It also includes papers addressing methodological issues in sign language research. The book presents papers by "more seasoned" res...

The Usage-based Study of Language Learning and Multilingualism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 307

The Usage-based Study of Language Learning and Multilingualism

Usage-based linguistics, which is currently very popular, bases its understanding of language on two key points: Languages are cognitive-social constructs (i.e., learned vs genetically endowed), and, in order for communication and meaning to happen, speakers must find a way to meet/understand each other, overcoming various differences (lexicon, social, register, etc.) to arrive there. In this book, high-level contributors combine research from various usage-based perspectives to explore these questions: How do proficient speakers accomplish 'mental contact' or communication through the available semiotic linguistic resources they share with other members of their discourse community? How do young children learn to accomplish this? And how do speakers of multiple languages learn to accomplish this across languages?

Discourse Markers and (Dis)fluency
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 270

Discourse Markers and (Dis)fluency

Spoken language is characterized by the occurrence of linguistic devices such as discourse markers (e.g. so, well, you know, I mean) and other so-called “disfluent” phenomena, which reflect the temporal nature of the cognitive mechanisms underlying speech production and comprehension. The purpose of this book is to distinguish between strategic vs. symptomatic uses of these markers on the basis of their combination, function and distribution across several registers in English and French. Through deep quantitative and qualitative analyses of manually annotated features in the new DisFrEn corpus, this usage-based study provides (i) an exhaustive portrait of discourse markers in English and French and (ii) a scale of (dis)fluency against which different configurations of discourse markers can be diagnosed as rather fluent or disfluent. By bringing together discourse markers and (dis)fluency under one coherent framework, this book is a unique contribution to corpus-based pragmatics, discourse analysis and crosslinguistic fluency research.

The Grammar of Genres and Styles
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 236

The Grammar of Genres and Styles

The book provides new findings about the grammar of genres and styles. It combines new methods with different kinds of empirical material, from social reports to live TV sports commentaries or 16th century newspapers, in English, French, Latin and Spanish. The study of non-discrete units suggests new ways of seeing the linguistic variation between genres and styles and the ways in which belonging to a genre predetermines linguistic choices.