In:Voices Past and Present - Studies of Involved, Speech-related and Spoken Texts: In honor of Merja Kytö
Edited by Ewa Jonsson and Tove Larsson
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics 97] 2020
► pp. v–viii
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 5 October 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.97.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.97.toc
Table of contents
List of contributors
ix
Foreword
xi
Jonathan Culpeper
Chapter 1.Voices of English: Tapping into records past and present
1
Ewa Jonsson
Tove Larsson
Part I.Early Modern English
Chapter 2.Pragmatic noise in Shakespeare’s plays
11
Jonathan Culpeper
Samuel J. Oliver
Chapter 3.Keywords that characterise Shakespeare’s (anti)heroes and villains
31
Dawn Archer
Alison Findlay
Chapter 4.Revealing speech: Agentivity in Iago’s and Othello’s soliloquies
47
Juhani Rudanko
Chapter 5.Saying, crying, replying, and continuing: Speech reporting expressions in Early Modern English
63
Terry Walker
Peter J. Grund
Chapter 6.Interjections in early popular literature: Stereotypes and innovation
79
Irma Taavitsainen
Chapter 7.Godly vocabulary in Early Modern English religious debate
95
Jeremy J. Smith
Chapter 8.
Patterns of reader involvement on sixteenth-century English title pages, with
special reference to second-person pronouns
113
Matti Peikola
Part II.Late Modern English
Chapter 9.Epistemic adverbs in the Old Bailey Corpus
133
Claudia Claridge
Chapter 10.Question strategies in the Old Bailey Corpus
153
Patricia Ronan
Chapter 11.
Sure in Irish English: The diachrony of a pragmatic marker
173
Raymond Hickey
Chapter 12.American English gotten
: Historical retention, change from below, or something else?
187
Lieselotte Anderwald
Part III.Present-day English
Chapter 13.Explaining explanatory so
207
David Denison
Chapter 14.Return to the future: Exploring spoken language in the BNC and BNC2014
227
Ylva Berglund Prytz
Chapter 15.
Sort of and kind of from an English-Swedish perspective
247
Karin Aijmer
Chapter 16.From yes to innit
: Origin, development and general characteristics of pragmatic markers
265
Anna-Brita Stenström
Chapter 17.
“If anyone would have told me, I would have not believed it”: Using corpora to question assumptions about spoken vs. written grammar in EFL grammars and other normative
works
283
Sarah Schwarz
Erik Smitterberg
Chapter 18.Intensification in dialogue vs. narrative in a corpus of present-day English fiction
301
Signe Oksefjell Ebeling
Hilde Hasselgård
Chapter 19.Orality on the searchable web: A comparison of involved web registers and face-to-face conversation
317
Douglas Biber
Jesse Egbert
Selected list of publications by Merja Kytö
337
Index
347
