In:Grammar of Spoken and Written English
Douglas Biber, Stig Johansson, Geoffrey N. Leech, Susan Conrad and Edward Finegan
[Not in series 232] 2021
► pp. 3–48
Chapter 1Introduction
A corpus-based approach to English grammar
Published online: 29 November 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.232.c1
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.232.c1
Article outline
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1.1Introduction
- 1.1.1Major goals of the GSWE
- 1.2Structure and use in English grammar
- 1.2.1Register distribution
- 1.2.2Lexico-grammatical patterns
- 1.2.3Grammatical/discourse factors
- 1.3Varieties of English
- 1.3.1Registers of English
- 1.3.2Dialect distinctions
- 1.3.3Standard and non-standard English
- 1.3.3.1Variation within standard English
- 1.3.3.2Variation within non-standard English
- 1.3.4The relative importance of register and dialect differences
- 1.4Representation of varieties in the LSWE Corpus
- 1.4.1Register distinctions in the LSWE Corpus
- 1.4.2Dialect distinctions in the LSWE Corpus
- 1.4.3Size of the LSWE Corpus
- 1.4.4Representativeness and accuracy of the LSWE Corpus
- 1.5Description of the register categories in the LSWE Corpus
- 1.5.1Conversation
- 1.5.2Fiction
- 1.5.3News
- 1.5.4Academic prose
- 1.5.5Supplementary registers
- 1.6Grammatical analysis of the LSWE Corpus
- 1.7Quantitative findings in the grammar
- 1.8Functional interpretation of quantitative findings
- 1.8.1Function as the performance of tasks
- 1.8.2Function as a reflection of processing constraints
- 1.8.3Function as social or situational indexing
- 1.8.4Other explanatory considerations
- 1.9Overview of the grammar
- 1.10Potential users and uses of the GSWE
