In:Variation and Change in Spoken and Written Discourse: Perspectives from corpus linguistics
Edited by Julia Bamford, Silvia Cavalieri and Giuliana Diani
[Dialogue Studies 21] 2013
► pp. v–vi
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 31 October 2013
https://doi.org/10.1075/ds.21.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/ds.21.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgementsvii
Introduction
I. Corpus analysis of spoken dialogue
i. Variation and academic dialogue
1
. Speaking professionally in an L2: Issues of corpus methodology
2. Common features and variations in the use of personal pronouns in two types of monologic academic speech
ii. Dialogue in spoken and written business discourse
3. Variation across spoken and written registers in internal corporate communication: Multimodality and blending in evolving genres
4. Using grammatical tagging to explore spoken/written variation in small specialized corpora
iii. Dialogic variation and language varieties
5. Exploring regional variation in Italian question intonation: A corpus-based study
6. Estonian emotional speech corpus: Content and options
7. Using movie corpora to explore spoken American English: Evidence from multi-dimensional analysis
8. “But that’s dialect, isn’t it?”: Exploring geographical variation in the SCOTS corpus
II. Using corpora to analyse written discourse: A diachronic perspective
i. Diachronic approaches to historical corpora
9. Variation in the language of London newspapers: January 1701
10. From letters to guidebooks: Ruskin’s Mornings in Florence
11. Justificatory arguments in writing on art: Toulmin’s model tested on a small corpus of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century exhibition reviews
12. Analysing discourse in research genre: The case of biostatistics
ii. Diachronic methodologies and language change
13. The difference a word can show: A diachronic corpus-based study of the demonstrative ‘this’ in tourism research article abstracts
14. Changing trends in Italian newspaper language: A diachronic, corpus-based study
15. A corpus-based analysis of some time-related aspects of contemporary Japanese
16. It’s always the same old news! A diachronic analysis of shifting newspaper language style, 1993–2005
Name index
Subject index
