Article published In: International Journal of Corpus Linguistics
Vol. 2:1 (1997) ► pp.133–152
Social Differentiation in the Use of English Vocabulary
Some Analyses of the Conversational Component of the British National Corpus
Published online: 1 January 1997
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.2.1.07ray
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.2.1.07ray
In this article, we undertake selective quantitative analyses of the demographi-cally-sampled spoken English component of the British National Corpus (for brevity, referred to here as the ''Conversational Corpus"). This is a subcorpus of c. 4.5 million words, in which speakers and respondents (see I below) are identified by such factors as gender, age, social group, and geographical region. Using a corpus analysis tool developed at Lancaster, we undertake a comparison of the vocabulary of speakers, highlighting those differences which are marked by a very high X2 value of difference between different sectors of the corpus according to gender, age, and social group. A fourth variable, that of geographical region of the United Kingdom, is not investigated in this article, although it remains a promising subject for future research. (As background we also briefly examine differences between spoken and written material in the British National Corpus [BNC].) This study is illustrative of the potentiality of the Conversational Corpus for future corpus-based research on social differentiation in the use of language. There are evident limitations, including (a) the reliance on vocabulary frequency lists and (b) the simplicity of the transcription system employed for the spoken part of the BNC The conclusion of the article considers future advances in the research paradigm illustrated here.
Cited by (94)
Cited by 94 other publications
Jaworska, Sylvia
LI, Yanjiao
Pan, Hongguang, Xin Chu, Rui Miao, Mei Wang, Yiran Wang & Zhuoyi Li
Almadanat, Dina & Kholoud Almadanat
Säily, Tanja, Turo Vartiainen, Harri Siirtola & Terttu Nevalainen
2024. Changing styles of letter-writing?. In Unlocking the History of English [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 364], ► pp. 154 ff.
van Dorst, Isolde, Mathew Gillings & Jonathan Culpeper
Van Driessche, Laetitia
2024. Susanne Flach and Martin Hilpert (eds.), Broadening the spectrum of corpus linguistics: New approaches to variability and change (Studies in Corpus Linguistics 105). Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2022. Pp. vi + 321. ISBN 9789027212665.. English Language and Linguistics 28:2 ► pp. 439 ff.
Vartiainen, Turo & Tanja Säily
2024. Engaging with bad (meta)data in historical corpus linguistics. In Challenges in corpus linguistics [Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 118], ► pp. 9 ff.
Piersoul, Jozefien & Freek Van de Velde
Zhang, Beibei, Yaqun Fang, Fan Yu, Jia Bei & Tongwei Ren
Andersen, Gisle
2022. Utilising heterogeneous language resources for term extraction in maritime domains. Terminology. International Journal of Theoretical and Applied Issues in Specialized Communication 28:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Bernaisch, Tobias
Leone, Ljubica
Robinson, Jeffrey D., Christoph Rühlemann & Daniel Taylor Rodriguez
Schneider, Gerold
2022. Recent changes in spoken British English in verbal and nominal constructions. In Broadening the Spectrum of Corpus Linguistics [Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 105], ► pp. 173 ff.
Schneider, Gerold
Shiel, Lisha, Zsófia Demjén & Vaughan Bell
Collins, Peter
Degaetano-Ortlieb, Stefania, Tanja Säily & Yuri Bizzoni
Love, Robbie
Rühlemann, Christoph & Martin Schweinberger
Su, Hang
2021. Changing patterns of apology in spoken British English. Pragmatics and Society 12:3 ► pp. 410 ff.
Zhu, Shucheng, Xi Wang & Pengyuan Liu
Angelopoulou, Georgia, Erin L. Meier, Dimitrios Kasselimis, Yue Pan, Dimitrios Tsolakopoulos, George Velonakis, Efstratios Karavasilis, Nikolaos L. Kelekis, Dionysios Goutsos, Constantin Potagas & Swathi Kiran
Davis, Boyd H. & Margaret A. Maclagan
Desagulier, Guillaume
Jeaco, Stephen
2020. Key words when text forms the unit of study. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 25:2 ► pp. 125 ff.
Revis, Melanie & Tobias Bernaisch
Rühlemann, Christoph & Stefan Th. Gries
Rühlemann, Christoph & Stefan Th. Gries
2021. How do speakers and hearers disambiguate multi-functional words?. Functions of Language 28:1 ► pp. 55 ff.
Tagliamonte, Sali A. & Katharina Pabst
Karibayeva, Buadat & Salima Kunanbayeva
Motschenbacher, Heiko
2018. Corpus linguistics in language and sexuality studies. Journal of Language and Sexuality 7:2 ► pp. 145 ff.
Fuchs, Robert
2017. Do women (still) use more intensifiers than men?. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 22:3 ► pp. 345 ff.
Fuchs, Robert
Laws, Jacqueline, Chris Ryder & Sylvia Jaworska
2017. A diachronic corpus-based study into the effects of age and gender on the usage patterns of verb-forming suffixation in spoken British English. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 22:3 ► pp. 375 ff.
Säily, Tanja, Turo Vartiainen & Harri Siirtola
2017. Exploring part-of-speech frequencies in a sociohistorical corpus of English. In Exploring Future Paths for Historical Sociolinguistics [Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics, 7], ► pp. 23 ff.
Gorman, Kyle, Lindsay Olson, Alison Presmanes Hill, Rebecca Lunsford, Peter A. Heeman & Jan P. H. van Santen
Lijffijt, Jefrey, Terttu Nevalainen, Tanja Säily, Panagiotis Papapetrou, Kai Puolamäki & Heikki Mannila
Säily, Tanja
Dewaele, Jean-Marc
Dewaele, Jean-Marc
Dewaele, Jean-Marc
Ishikawa, Yuka
Liang, Maocheng
Sea-Eun Jhang, KIM ShinHo & 이성민
Bestgen, Y.
Blaxter, Tam T.
Brezina, Vaclav & Miriam Meyerhoff
BROWN, DAVID WEST & TEO SHI JIE
Provasi, Joëlle, David I. Anderson & Marianne Barbu-Roth
Tottie, Gunnel
Aull, Laura L. & David West Brown
Napoli, Donna Jo, Jami Fisher & Gene Mirus
Granier-Deferre, Carolyn, Sophie Bassereau, Aurélie Ribeiro, Anne-Yvonne Jacquet, Anthony J. DeCasper & Georges Chapouthier
Kendall, Tyler
Lijffijt, Jefrey, Panagiotis Papapetrou, Kai Puolamäki & Heikki Mannila
Nawrot, Monika
Saily, T., T. Nevalainen & H. Siirtola
Gabrielatos, Costas, Eivind Nessa Torgersen, Sebastian Hoffmann & Susan Fox
Nokkonen, Soili
Rühlemann, Christoph
Rühlemann, Christoph
Rühlemann, Christoph
Rühlemann, Christoph
Siirtola, Harri, Kari-Jouko Räihä, Tanja Säily & Terttu Nevalainen
Sunderland, Jane
DeCasper, Anthony J. & Phyllis Prescott
Lam, Phoenix
Nowson, Scott
Tam, Jenny & Craig H. Martell
Watson, Patrick G., Penny Duquenoy, Margaret Brennan, Matt Jones & James Walkerdine
Barbieri, Federica
Hughes, Danny, Paul Rayson, James Walkerdine, Kevin Lee, Phil Greenwood, Awais Rashid, Corinne May-Chahal & Margaret Brennan
Seale, Clive & Jonathan Charteris-Black
Seale, Clive, Jonathan Charteris-Black, Carol Dumelow, Louise Locock & Sue Ziebland
Goldschmidt, Nils & Benedikt Szmrecsanyi
Mehl, Matthias R., Simine Vazire, Nairán Ramírez-Esparza, Richard B. Slatcher & James W. Pennebaker
Oakes, M. P. & M. Farrow
Wiggers, Pascal & Leon J. M. Rothkrantz
Gries, Stefan Th.
Oberlander, Jon & Alastair J. Gill
Härnqvist, Kjell, Ulf Christianson, Daniel Ridings & Jan-Gunnar Tingsell
Botley, Simon & Tony Mcenery
Botley, Simon & Tony Mcenery
Oakes, Michael, Robert Gaaizauskas, Helene Fowkes, Anna Jonsson, Vincent Wan & Micheline Beaulieu
Rayson, Paul, Luke Emmet, Roger Garside & Pete Sawyer
Rayson, P., R. Garside & P. Sawyer
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 12 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
