In:Exploring the Lexis–Grammar Interface
Edited by Ute Römer-Barron and Rainer Schulze
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics 35] 2009
► pp. 117–135
The lexicogrammar of present-day Indian English
Corpus-based perspectives on structural nativisation
Published online: 11 March 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.35.9muk
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.35.9muk
The present paper puts into perspective four areas in which new local norms have emerged in the lexicogrammar of Indian English, the largest institutionalised second-language variety of English world-wide: (1) collocations, (2) new prepositional verbs, (3) new ditransitive verbs, and (4) verb-complementational patterns. At the descriptive level, it will be shown that corpus-based research provides new insights into quantitative and qualitative aspects of on-going structural nativisation at the lexis-grammar interface of Indian English. At the methodological level, it will be argued that in research into New Englishes well-balanced standard-size corpora can be fruitfully combined with very large collections of text obtained from the world-wide web, i.e. web-derived corpora.
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Edwards, Alison & Samantha Laporte
2015. Outer and expanding circle Englishes. English World-Wide. A Journal of Varieties of English 36:2 ► pp. 135 ff.
Römer, Ute, Matthew Brook O'Donnell & Nick C. Ellis
2015. Chapter 2. Using COBUILD grammar patterns for a large-scale analysis of verb-argument constructions. In Corpora, Grammar and Discourse [Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 73], ► pp. 43 ff.
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