Afterword published In: Register Studies
Vol. 1:1 (2019) ► pp.199–208
Afterword
Published online: 26 April 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/rs.18016.fin
https://doi.org/10.1075/rs.18016.fin
Abstract
Edward Finegan, Professor Emeritus of Linguistics and Law at the University of Southern California, provides this
afterword to synthesize and provide commentary on the six articles in this issue. He has been involved with research on register
for more than 30 years, publishing a large number of empirical studies on register and the book Sociolinguistic
Perspectives on Register (Biber & Finegan 1994, Oxford University
Press). He is also co-author on the Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English (Biber, Johansson, Leech, Conrad, & Finegan 1999, Longman), the first comprehensive reference grammar
to systematically account for register. He is currently involved in research on the relationship between register variation and
social dialect variation. In addition to his research on register, Finegan has made tremendous contributions in the areas of
general linguistics, language variation in the U.S., and language attitudes toward correctness, publishing widely-used textbooks
in all three areas. He has also been an influential figure in the application of linguistics in legal proceedings, acting as
expert witness in many legal cases, particularly those related to defamation and trademark. He currently serves as the Editor of
the journal Dictionaries: The Journal of the Dictionary Society of North America.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Register in Systemic Functional Linguistics
- 3.Text-linguistics approaches to register
- 4.Register in variationist linguistics
- 5.Register in computational language research
- 6.Register in historical linguistics
- 7.Register in EAP/ESP
- 8.Some concluding observations
References
