Corpora: corpi

From: PFranklin (pfranklin@superonline.com)
Date: Thu Apr 05 2001 - 11:27:03 MET DST

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    I chose to hire a recent MA in Linguistics (BA, too) graduate from the
    highly regarded University of Chicago as a substitute ESL teacher. On his
    first day of work, he came up with "corpi." A few weeks later he left
    without giving notice, and I can't say I was displeased.

    Philip Franklin, Director,
    Social Sciences Institute English Preparatory Program
    Istanbul Bilgi University
    Inonu Cd. No. 28 (Y 436)
    Kustepe - Sisli
    Istanbul 80310 TURKEY
    tel: 90-212-216-2222 x 466
    fax: 90-212-216-2536
    pfranklin@bilgi.edu.tr
    philip.franklin@usa.net

    Steven Krauwer wrote:

    > harold.somers@umist.ac.uk wrote:
    > >
    > > A number of respondents have commented on alternative plurals,
    > > but actually my posting was in response to two or three postings
    > > just that day using "corpora" as the singular, as in "I am looking for
    > > a corpora of child language". This is something my students do all
    > > the time, and I was sorry to see it spread to this mailoing list,
    > > where I thought people would know better. Whatever you think the
    > > plural is, you surely agree that "corpus" is the singular (and
    > > "corpora" isn't).
    >
    > The one I like most and that hasn't been mentioned yet is 'corpi':
    > AltaVista gave me 382 hits (on +corpi +text, English only, in order
    > to avoid Italian texts).
    >
    > Just try to use it in a discussion and look what happens!
    >
    > -- Steven
    > ______________________________________________________________________
    > Steven Krauwer, ELSNET / UiL OTS, Trans 10, 3512 JK Utrecht, Nederland
    > phone: +31 30 2536050, fax: +31 30 2536000, email: s.krauwer@let.uu.nl
    > http://www-sk.let.uu.nl http://www.elsnet.org



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