03155nam 2200529Ia 450 991082525380332120200520144314.01-282-16275-6978661216275690-272-9849-1(CKB)1000000000552942(SSID)ssj0000282722(PQKBManifestationID)11225080(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000282722(PQKBWorkID)10323804(PQKB)10779334(MiAaPQ)EBC622951(EXLCZ)99100000000055294220000815d2001 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrPatterns of text in honour of Michael Hoey /edited by Mike Scott, Geoff Thompson1st ed.Amsterdam ;Philadelphia John Benjamins Pub. Co.c20011 online resource (331 pages)Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph1-55619-792-6 90-272-2572-9 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Patterns of Text -- Title page -- LCC page -- Table of contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: Why 'patterns of text '? -- Colligation, lexis, pattern, and text -- Lexical signals of word relations -- Patterns of cohesion in spoken text -- Issues in modelling the textual metafunction -- Mapping key words to problem and solution -- The negotiation of evaluation in written text -- Some discourse patterns and signalling of the assessment -basis relation -- Repeat after me: The role of repetition in the life of an emergent reader -- Lexical segments in text -- Patterns of lexis on the surface of texts -- Patterns of text in teacher education -- The deification of information -- Name index -- Subject index.It is increasingly clear that, in order to understand language as a phenomenon, we must understand the phenomenon of text. Our primary experience of language comes in the form of texts, which embody the complete communicative events through which our language-using lives are lived. These events are shaped by communicative needs, and this shaping is reflected in certain characteristic patterns in the texts. However, the nature of texts and text is still elusive: we know which forms are typically found in text but we do not yet have a full grasp of how they constitute its textuality, how they make a text "tick". The twelve contributions to this volume show how texts across a wide range of text types hold together by different patterns of chunking and linking. The common purpose in all the contributions is to explore the nature of text patterning as the functional environment within which language operates.Discourse analysisDiscourse analysis.401/.41Hoey Michael153633Scott Mike1946-738395Thompson Geoff1947-259766MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910825253803321Patterns of text4198038UNINA