Corpus stylistics and Dickens's fiction / / Michaela Mahlberg |
Autore | Mahlberg Michaela |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | New York : , : Routledge, , 2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (237 p.) |
Disciplina | 823/.8 |
Collana | Routledge advances in corpus linguistics |
Soggetto topico |
Corpora (Linguistics)
English language - Style Discourse analysis, Literary |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-283-97270-0
0-203-07608-7 1-135-12359-4 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Corpus Stylistics and Dickens's Fiction; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables, Figures, and Concordances; Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 Corpus Stylistics; INTRODUCTION; 1.1 SHARED GROUND AND INNOVATION; 1.1.1 Foregrounding theory and corpus norms; 1.1.2 The philological and the corpus stylistic circle; 1.1.3 The stylistician's toolkit and units of description; 1.2 EXAMPLES OF CORPUS STYLISTIC WORK; 1.3 ENTERING THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION; CONCLUSIONS; 2 Textual Building Blocks of Fictional Worlds; INTRODUCTION
2.1 MEMORABLE CHARACTERS IN THE DICKENSIAN WORLD2.2 CHARACTERISATION AND TEXT WORLDS; 2.3 INDUCTION AND ABSTRACTION IN THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE; 2.4 A TEXT-DRIVEN APPROACH TO TEXTUAL BUILDING BLOCKS OF FICTIONAL WORLDS; CONCLUSIONS; 3 Starting with the Texts: Corpora, Clusters, and Lexical Bundles; INTRODUCTION; 3.1 TEXTS AND CORPORA; 3.2 DEFINING AND RETRIEVING CLUSTERS-INITIAL EXAMPLES; 3.3 APPROACHES TO CLUSTERS AND FUNCTIONAL INTERPRETATIONS; 3.4 LEXICAL BUNDLES OR CLUSTERS FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION?; 3.4.1 Lexical bundles in fiction; 3.4.2 Increasing the length of clusters CONCLUSIONS4 Groups of Clusters for the Identification of Local Textual Functions; INTRODUCTION; 4.1 QUANTIFYING, COMPARING, AND CLASSIFYING CLUSTERS; 4.2 KEY CLUSTERS AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CLUSTERS ACROSS TEXTS; 4.3 AN OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4 DISTRIBUTIONS OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4.1 Cluster categories in DCorp; 4.4.2 Cluster categories in 19C; 4.5 'KEY GROUPS' OF CLUSTERS; CONCLUSIONS; 5 Character Speech; INTRODUCTION; 5.1 FUNCTIONS OF SPEECH CLUSTERS; 5.1.1 Negotiating information; 5.1.2 Turn-taking; 5.1.3 Politeness formulae; 5.1.4 First-person narration 5.1.5 Contextualising and highlighting functions5.2 PHRASAL IMPOLITENESS AND CONFRONTATION; 5.3 FUNCTIONS IN CONTEXT: PICKWICKIAN CLASHES AND CONFRONTATION IN OLIVER TWIST; 5.4 VAGUE LANGUAGE AND OTHER EXAMPLES OF INTERPERSONAL MEANINGS; CONCLUSIONS; 6 Body Language; INTRODUCTION; 6.1 KORTE'S (1997) FRAMEWORK FOR THE ANALYSIS OF BODY LANGUAGE; 6.2 BODY LANGUAGE AND CHARACTERISATION; 6.3 FROM BODY PART CLUSTERS TO BODY LANGUAGE; 6.4 THE BODY LANGUAGE CLINE; 6.4.1 The 'fireplace pose'; 6.4.2 Gaze behaviour: eyes; 6.4.3 Touch behaviour and authentication: his hand upon his shoulder 6.4.4 Empty body language?6.4.5 Body language functioning as labels and thematic cues; CONCLUSIONS; 7 As If and the Narrator Comment; INTRODUCTION; 7.1 CLUSTERS AND FANCIFUL MEANINGS; 7.2 COLLOCATES AND PATTERNS OF NARRATOR COMMENTS; 7.2.1 Action verbs, body part nouns, and settings; 7.2.2 Manner; 7.2.3 LOOK; 7.2.4 SPEAK; 7.2.5 Significant collocates-Extending the meaning groups; 7.3 LEXICALLY DRIVEN DESCRIPTIONS OF BODY LANGUAGE; CONCLUSIONS; 8 Labels: Contextualising and Highlighting Functions; INTRODUCTION; 8.1 GROUPS OF LABELS AND THEIR FUNCTIONS; 8.1.1 Reporting Speech Labels 8.1.2 Speech Labels |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910462668203321 |
Mahlberg Michaela | ||
New York : , : Routledge, , 2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Corpus stylistics and Dickens's fiction / / Michaela Mahlberg |
Autore | Mahlberg Michaela |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | New York : , : Routledge, , 2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (237 p.) |
Disciplina | 823/.8 |
Collana | Routledge advances in corpus linguistics |
Soggetto topico |
Corpora (Linguistics)
English language - Style Discourse analysis, Literary |
ISBN |
1-135-12358-6
1-283-97270-0 0-203-07608-7 1-135-12359-4 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Corpus Stylistics and Dickens's Fiction; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables, Figures, and Concordances; Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 Corpus Stylistics; INTRODUCTION; 1.1 SHARED GROUND AND INNOVATION; 1.1.1 Foregrounding theory and corpus norms; 1.1.2 The philological and the corpus stylistic circle; 1.1.3 The stylistician's toolkit and units of description; 1.2 EXAMPLES OF CORPUS STYLISTIC WORK; 1.3 ENTERING THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION; CONCLUSIONS; 2 Textual Building Blocks of Fictional Worlds; INTRODUCTION
2.1 MEMORABLE CHARACTERS IN THE DICKENSIAN WORLD2.2 CHARACTERISATION AND TEXT WORLDS; 2.3 INDUCTION AND ABSTRACTION IN THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE; 2.4 A TEXT-DRIVEN APPROACH TO TEXTUAL BUILDING BLOCKS OF FICTIONAL WORLDS; CONCLUSIONS; 3 Starting with the Texts: Corpora, Clusters, and Lexical Bundles; INTRODUCTION; 3.1 TEXTS AND CORPORA; 3.2 DEFINING AND RETRIEVING CLUSTERS-INITIAL EXAMPLES; 3.3 APPROACHES TO CLUSTERS AND FUNCTIONAL INTERPRETATIONS; 3.4 LEXICAL BUNDLES OR CLUSTERS FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION?; 3.4.1 Lexical bundles in fiction; 3.4.2 Increasing the length of clusters CONCLUSIONS4 Groups of Clusters for the Identification of Local Textual Functions; INTRODUCTION; 4.1 QUANTIFYING, COMPARING, AND CLASSIFYING CLUSTERS; 4.2 KEY CLUSTERS AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CLUSTERS ACROSS TEXTS; 4.3 AN OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4 DISTRIBUTIONS OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4.1 Cluster categories in DCorp; 4.4.2 Cluster categories in 19C; 4.5 'KEY GROUPS' OF CLUSTERS; CONCLUSIONS; 5 Character Speech; INTRODUCTION; 5.1 FUNCTIONS OF SPEECH CLUSTERS; 5.1.1 Negotiating information; 5.1.2 Turn-taking; 5.1.3 Politeness formulae; 5.1.4 First-person narration 5.1.5 Contextualising and highlighting functions5.2 PHRASAL IMPOLITENESS AND CONFRONTATION; 5.3 FUNCTIONS IN CONTEXT: PICKWICKIAN CLASHES AND CONFRONTATION IN OLIVER TWIST; 5.4 VAGUE LANGUAGE AND OTHER EXAMPLES OF INTERPERSONAL MEANINGS; CONCLUSIONS; 6 Body Language; INTRODUCTION; 6.1 KORTE'S (1997) FRAMEWORK FOR THE ANALYSIS OF BODY LANGUAGE; 6.2 BODY LANGUAGE AND CHARACTERISATION; 6.3 FROM BODY PART CLUSTERS TO BODY LANGUAGE; 6.4 THE BODY LANGUAGE CLINE; 6.4.1 The 'fireplace pose'; 6.4.2 Gaze behaviour: eyes; 6.4.3 Touch behaviour and authentication: his hand upon his shoulder 6.4.4 Empty body language?6.4.5 Body language functioning as labels and thematic cues; CONCLUSIONS; 7 As If and the Narrator Comment; INTRODUCTION; 7.1 CLUSTERS AND FANCIFUL MEANINGS; 7.2 COLLOCATES AND PATTERNS OF NARRATOR COMMENTS; 7.2.1 Action verbs, body part nouns, and settings; 7.2.2 Manner; 7.2.3 LOOK; 7.2.4 SPEAK; 7.2.5 Significant collocates-Extending the meaning groups; 7.3 LEXICALLY DRIVEN DESCRIPTIONS OF BODY LANGUAGE; CONCLUSIONS; 8 Labels: Contextualising and Highlighting Functions; INTRODUCTION; 8.1 GROUPS OF LABELS AND THEIR FUNCTIONS; 8.1.1 Reporting Speech Labels 8.1.2 Speech Labels |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910786189503321 |
Mahlberg Michaela | ||
New York : , : Routledge, , 2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Corpus stylistics and Dickens's fiction / / Michaela Mahlberg |
Autore | Mahlberg Michaela |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | New York : , : Routledge, , 2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (237 p.) |
Disciplina | 823/.8 |
Collana | Routledge advances in corpus linguistics |
Soggetto topico |
Corpora (Linguistics)
English language - Style Discourse analysis, Literary |
ISBN |
1-135-12358-6
1-283-97270-0 0-203-07608-7 1-135-12359-4 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Corpus Stylistics and Dickens's Fiction; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables, Figures, and Concordances; Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 Corpus Stylistics; INTRODUCTION; 1.1 SHARED GROUND AND INNOVATION; 1.1.1 Foregrounding theory and corpus norms; 1.1.2 The philological and the corpus stylistic circle; 1.1.3 The stylistician's toolkit and units of description; 1.2 EXAMPLES OF CORPUS STYLISTIC WORK; 1.3 ENTERING THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION; CONCLUSIONS; 2 Textual Building Blocks of Fictional Worlds; INTRODUCTION
2.1 MEMORABLE CHARACTERS IN THE DICKENSIAN WORLD2.2 CHARACTERISATION AND TEXT WORLDS; 2.3 INDUCTION AND ABSTRACTION IN THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE; 2.4 A TEXT-DRIVEN APPROACH TO TEXTUAL BUILDING BLOCKS OF FICTIONAL WORLDS; CONCLUSIONS; 3 Starting with the Texts: Corpora, Clusters, and Lexical Bundles; INTRODUCTION; 3.1 TEXTS AND CORPORA; 3.2 DEFINING AND RETRIEVING CLUSTERS-INITIAL EXAMPLES; 3.3 APPROACHES TO CLUSTERS AND FUNCTIONAL INTERPRETATIONS; 3.4 LEXICAL BUNDLES OR CLUSTERS FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION?; 3.4.1 Lexical bundles in fiction; 3.4.2 Increasing the length of clusters CONCLUSIONS4 Groups of Clusters for the Identification of Local Textual Functions; INTRODUCTION; 4.1 QUANTIFYING, COMPARING, AND CLASSIFYING CLUSTERS; 4.2 KEY CLUSTERS AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CLUSTERS ACROSS TEXTS; 4.3 AN OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4 DISTRIBUTIONS OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4.1 Cluster categories in DCorp; 4.4.2 Cluster categories in 19C; 4.5 'KEY GROUPS' OF CLUSTERS; CONCLUSIONS; 5 Character Speech; INTRODUCTION; 5.1 FUNCTIONS OF SPEECH CLUSTERS; 5.1.1 Negotiating information; 5.1.2 Turn-taking; 5.1.3 Politeness formulae; 5.1.4 First-person narration 5.1.5 Contextualising and highlighting functions5.2 PHRASAL IMPOLITENESS AND CONFRONTATION; 5.3 FUNCTIONS IN CONTEXT: PICKWICKIAN CLASHES AND CONFRONTATION IN OLIVER TWIST; 5.4 VAGUE LANGUAGE AND OTHER EXAMPLES OF INTERPERSONAL MEANINGS; CONCLUSIONS; 6 Body Language; INTRODUCTION; 6.1 KORTE'S (1997) FRAMEWORK FOR THE ANALYSIS OF BODY LANGUAGE; 6.2 BODY LANGUAGE AND CHARACTERISATION; 6.3 FROM BODY PART CLUSTERS TO BODY LANGUAGE; 6.4 THE BODY LANGUAGE CLINE; 6.4.1 The 'fireplace pose'; 6.4.2 Gaze behaviour: eyes; 6.4.3 Touch behaviour and authentication: his hand upon his shoulder 6.4.4 Empty body language?6.4.5 Body language functioning as labels and thematic cues; CONCLUSIONS; 7 As If and the Narrator Comment; INTRODUCTION; 7.1 CLUSTERS AND FANCIFUL MEANINGS; 7.2 COLLOCATES AND PATTERNS OF NARRATOR COMMENTS; 7.2.1 Action verbs, body part nouns, and settings; 7.2.2 Manner; 7.2.3 LOOK; 7.2.4 SPEAK; 7.2.5 Significant collocates-Extending the meaning groups; 7.3 LEXICALLY DRIVEN DESCRIPTIONS OF BODY LANGUAGE; CONCLUSIONS; 8 Labels: Contextualising and Highlighting Functions; INTRODUCTION; 8.1 GROUPS OF LABELS AND THEIR FUNCTIONS; 8.1.1 Reporting Speech Labels 8.1.2 Speech Labels |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910800038703321 |
Mahlberg Michaela | ||
New York : , : Routledge, , 2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Corpus stylistics and Dickens's fiction / / Michaela Mahlberg |
Autore | Mahlberg Michaela |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | New York : , : Routledge, , 2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (237 p.) |
Disciplina | 823/.8 |
Collana | Routledge advances in corpus linguistics |
Soggetto topico |
Corpora (Linguistics)
English language - Style Discourse analysis, Literary |
ISBN |
1-135-12358-6
1-283-97270-0 0-203-07608-7 1-135-12359-4 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Corpus Stylistics and Dickens's Fiction; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables, Figures, and Concordances; Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 Corpus Stylistics; INTRODUCTION; 1.1 SHARED GROUND AND INNOVATION; 1.1.1 Foregrounding theory and corpus norms; 1.1.2 The philological and the corpus stylistic circle; 1.1.3 The stylistician's toolkit and units of description; 1.2 EXAMPLES OF CORPUS STYLISTIC WORK; 1.3 ENTERING THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION; CONCLUSIONS; 2 Textual Building Blocks of Fictional Worlds; INTRODUCTION
2.1 MEMORABLE CHARACTERS IN THE DICKENSIAN WORLD2.2 CHARACTERISATION AND TEXT WORLDS; 2.3 INDUCTION AND ABSTRACTION IN THE CORPUS STYLISTIC CIRCLE; 2.4 A TEXT-DRIVEN APPROACH TO TEXTUAL BUILDING BLOCKS OF FICTIONAL WORLDS; CONCLUSIONS; 3 Starting with the Texts: Corpora, Clusters, and Lexical Bundles; INTRODUCTION; 3.1 TEXTS AND CORPORA; 3.2 DEFINING AND RETRIEVING CLUSTERS-INITIAL EXAMPLES; 3.3 APPROACHES TO CLUSTERS AND FUNCTIONAL INTERPRETATIONS; 3.4 LEXICAL BUNDLES OR CLUSTERS FOR THE STUDY OF DICKENS'S FICTION?; 3.4.1 Lexical bundles in fiction; 3.4.2 Increasing the length of clusters CONCLUSIONS4 Groups of Clusters for the Identification of Local Textual Functions; INTRODUCTION; 4.1 QUANTIFYING, COMPARING, AND CLASSIFYING CLUSTERS; 4.2 KEY CLUSTERS AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF CLUSTERS ACROSS TEXTS; 4.3 AN OPERATIONAL DEFINITION OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4 DISTRIBUTIONS OF CLUSTER GROUPS; 4.4.1 Cluster categories in DCorp; 4.4.2 Cluster categories in 19C; 4.5 'KEY GROUPS' OF CLUSTERS; CONCLUSIONS; 5 Character Speech; INTRODUCTION; 5.1 FUNCTIONS OF SPEECH CLUSTERS; 5.1.1 Negotiating information; 5.1.2 Turn-taking; 5.1.3 Politeness formulae; 5.1.4 First-person narration 5.1.5 Contextualising and highlighting functions5.2 PHRASAL IMPOLITENESS AND CONFRONTATION; 5.3 FUNCTIONS IN CONTEXT: PICKWICKIAN CLASHES AND CONFRONTATION IN OLIVER TWIST; 5.4 VAGUE LANGUAGE AND OTHER EXAMPLES OF INTERPERSONAL MEANINGS; CONCLUSIONS; 6 Body Language; INTRODUCTION; 6.1 KORTE'S (1997) FRAMEWORK FOR THE ANALYSIS OF BODY LANGUAGE; 6.2 BODY LANGUAGE AND CHARACTERISATION; 6.3 FROM BODY PART CLUSTERS TO BODY LANGUAGE; 6.4 THE BODY LANGUAGE CLINE; 6.4.1 The 'fireplace pose'; 6.4.2 Gaze behaviour: eyes; 6.4.3 Touch behaviour and authentication: his hand upon his shoulder 6.4.4 Empty body language?6.4.5 Body language functioning as labels and thematic cues; CONCLUSIONS; 7 As If and the Narrator Comment; INTRODUCTION; 7.1 CLUSTERS AND FANCIFUL MEANINGS; 7.2 COLLOCATES AND PATTERNS OF NARRATOR COMMENTS; 7.2.1 Action verbs, body part nouns, and settings; 7.2.2 Manner; 7.2.3 LOOK; 7.2.4 SPEAK; 7.2.5 Significant collocates-Extending the meaning groups; 7.3 LEXICALLY DRIVEN DESCRIPTIONS OF BODY LANGUAGE; CONCLUSIONS; 8 Labels: Contextualising and Highlighting Functions; INTRODUCTION; 8.1 GROUPS OF LABELS AND THEIR FUNCTIONS; 8.1.1 Reporting Speech Labels 8.1.2 Speech Labels |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910827488003321 |
Mahlberg Michaela | ||
New York : , : Routledge, , 2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
English general nouns [[electronic resource] ] : a corpus theoretical approach / / Michaela Mahlberg |
Autore | Mahlberg Michaela |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, 2005 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (217 p.) |
Disciplina | 425/.54 |
Collana | Studies in corpus linguistics |
Soggetto topico |
English language - Noun
English language - Discourse analysis Computational linguistics |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-282-15623-3
9786612156236 90-272-9394-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910449918403321 |
Mahlberg Michaela | ||
Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, 2005 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
English general nouns [[electronic resource] ] : a corpus theoretical approach / / Michaela Mahlberg |
Autore | Mahlberg Michaela |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, 2005 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (217 p.) |
Disciplina | 425/.54 |
Collana | Studies in corpus linguistics |
Soggetto topico |
English language - Noun
English language - Discourse analysis Computational linguistics |
ISBN |
1-282-15623-3
9786612156236 90-272-9394-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910783426603321 |
Mahlberg Michaela | ||
Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, 2005 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
English general nouns : a corpus theoretical approach / / Michaela Mahlberg |
Autore | Mahlberg Michaela |
Edizione | [1st ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, 2005 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (217 p.) |
Disciplina | 425/.54 |
Collana | Studies in corpus linguistics |
Soggetto topico |
English language - Noun
English language - Discourse analysis Computational linguistics |
ISBN |
1-282-15623-3
9786612156236 90-272-9394-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
English General Nouns -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- The attention they have been getting -- Introduction -- 1.1. Halliday & -- Hasan's (1976) approach -- 1.2. The class of general nouns -- 1.3. The cohesive function of general nouns: Continuum and context -- 1.4. Corpus linguistic findings -- Conclusion -- Notes -- The corpus linguistic point of view -- Introduction -- 2.1. Electronic corpora and the study of language -- 2.2. Corpus linguistics: Theory and methodology -- 2.2.1. Corpus-based versus corpus-driven approaches -- 2.2.2. Technical possibilities and descriptive tools -- 2.3. A lexical approach to the description of English -- 2.3.1. The lexical item -- 2.3.2. The Pattern Grammar -- 2.3.3. Lexical priming -- 2.3.4. Lexis, grammar, and text: Differences in the corpus-driven approach -- 2.4. A corpus theoretical approach to general nouns -- 2.4.1. The corpus theoretical framework -- 2.4.2. Minimal assumptions for the study of general nouns -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Minimal assumptions in practice -- Introduction -- 3.1. The corpora of the present study -- 3.2. Frequency -- 3.2.1. What does the computer count? -- 3.2.2. Frequency lists and key words -- 3.2.3. Frequency and general nouns -- 3.2.4. The nouns in the corpus study -- 3.3. Context -- 3.3.1. Analysing concordance data -- 3.3.2. Dynamic categories and ad hoc labels -- Conclusion -- Note -- Time nouns -- Introduction -- 4.1. Time nouns - an overview -- Time orientation -- Measurement -- Investing time -- Time passes -- History, life -- School, university -- Evaluation and text organisation -- Combinations -- Other examples -- 4.2. Time orientation -- 4.3. Investing time -- Concordance 4.2 The 15 examples in the investing time group -- 4.4. Evaluation and text organisation -- 4.5. The fuzziness of meaning.
4.6. The need for local categories of description -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Appendix -- 100 concordance lines for time -- 100 concordance lines for times -- 100 concordance lines for year -- 100 concordance lines for years -- 100 concordance lines for day -- People nouns -- Introduction -- 5.1. People nouns - an overview -- 5.1.1. Meanings of people nouns -- Concordance 5.1 The first 25 examples of man -- 5.1.2. The descriptive tool `person' -- 5.2. man and woman -- 5.2.1. The introducing function -- 5.2.2. The characterising function -- 5.2.3. The continuity function -- 5.2.4. The meaning of a noun in its narrow context: The support function -- 5.3. men and women -- Concordance 5.2 The 21 examples of men of category C that occur without determiners and modifiers -- Concordance 5.3 The 32 examples of women of category C that occur without determiners and modifiers -- 5.4. people -- Concordance 5.4 The 29 examples of people without determiners and modifiers -- 5.5. family -- 5.6. People nouns - the group -- Concordance 5.6 Some examples of government -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- 100 concordance lines for man -- 100 concordance lines for men -- 100 concordance lines for women -- 100 concordance lines for people -- World nouns -- Introduction -- 6.1. The diversity of meanings of world nouns -- Concordance 6.1 50 examples of part -- Concordance 6.2 Some examples of way -- 6.2. Evaluation in discourse -- 6.2.1. Language use and language functions -- 6.2.2. Approaching evaluation -- 6.2.3. Corpus linguistics and evaluation -- 6.3. Evaluative meanings of world nouns -- 6.3.1. Adjective patterns with general nouns -- 6.3.2. Evaluative patterns of world nouns -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Re-examining the minimal assumptions -- Introduction -- 7.1. Frequency -- 7.1.1. Meaning and paraphrase -- 7.1.2. Frequent nouns as characteristics of texts. 7.2. General nouns and the word class noun -- 7.3. Context -- 7.3.1. Subgroups of nouns -- 7.3.2. Local textual functions of general nouns -- 7.4. What are general nouns? -- 7.4.1. Quantitative and qualitative features of general nouns -- 7.4.2. General nouns and cohesion -- 7.4.3. A corpus linguistic view on general nouns -- Conclusion -- Note -- Developing the corpus linguistic theory -- Introduction -- 8.1. The methodology of the corpus study -- 8.2. Even more attention is needed -- 8.2.1. Future work -- 8.2.2. Applications -- 8.3. Describing meaning in text: A flexible approach -- 8.3.1. The elusiveness of meaning -- 8.3.2. The corpus linguistic theory - where are we now? -- 8.3.3. Flexible grammar -- Appendix 1 -- Appendix 2 -- References -- Index -- The series Studies in Corpus Linguistics. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910827522303321 |
Mahlberg Michaela | ||
Philadelphia, : John Benjamins, 2005 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|