Re: [Corpora-List] corpora and culture

From: Tony Berber Sardinha (tony4@uol.com.br)
Date: Tue Jul 02 2002 - 18:56:22 MET DST

  • Next message: John Milton: "Re: [Corpora-List] corpora and culture"

    Dear Geoff

    > me to wonder whether anyone has used the Freiburg "FLOB and Frown"

    Geoffrey Leech has done a comparison of that sort, which he presented during the
    last ICAME meeting:

    http://www.eng.gu.se/sv/news/icame2002/ICAME_2002abstract_v2.pdf

    Geoffrey Leech (University of Lancaster, United Kingdom)
    Recent Grammatical Changes in British English: Observation, Description and
    Theory

    We have been undertaking a study of recent grammatical change in British
    English,1
    using the LOB and FLOB corpora (representing published English in 1961 and 1991
    respectively), as well as explorations of American English and spoken English
    corpora
    covering the same period. From this study, certain 'facts' come to light:
    . From the data studied (mainly written British English), there have been
    significant
    increases in the use of the present progressive, of semi-modals, of verb and
    negative
    contractions, of adjectives, of nouns, of noun-noun sequences, of genitives, of
    proper nouns, of acronyms, of relative clauses with preposition-stranding
    . On the other hand, there have been significant decreases in the use of the
    modal
    auxiliaries, the passive, of pronouns and determiners, of of-phrases in
    competition
    with genitives, of wh- relative clauses.
    Using these findings, I want to explore the limitations of the validity of
    general
    statements made on the basis of corpus data. I will refer to three levels
    mimicking the
    three Chomskyan levels of observational, descriptive and explanatory adequacy. I
    will
    argue that descriptive and explanatory statements made in corpus linguistics are
    always
    provisional - but this is true also of any explanatory statement in science.

    cheers
    tony.
    -------------------------------------
    Dr Tony Berber Sardinha
    LAEL, PUC/SP
    (Catholic University of Sao Paulo, Brazil)
    tony4@uol.com.br
    http://lael.pucsp.br/~tony
    [New website]

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Geoffrey Sampson" <geoffs@cogs.susx.ac.uk>
    To: <corpora@hd.uib.no>
    Sent: terça-feira, 2 de julho de 2002 10:05
    Subject: [Corpora-List] corpora and culture

    >
    >
    > In the corpus linguistics anthology which Diana McCarthy and I are
    > compiling for Continuum, one of the items to be reprinted is Geoffrey
    > Leech and Roger Fallon's classic study of transatlantic cultural
    > differences as revealed by vocabulary in LOB and Brown.
    > Geoffrey and Roger point out that the differences may be out
    > of date - the corpora are more than 40 years old, and Britain feels
    > far more American to me now than it did in the 1960s. It occurs to
    > me to wonder whether anyone has used the Freiburg "FLOB and Frown"
    > Corpora to add time-depth to the study - if anything like that has
    > been done, our anthology ought to mention it?
    >
    >
    > Geoffrey Sampson MA PhD MBCS
    > Professor of Natural Language Computing
    >
    > School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences
    > University of Sussex
    > Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QH, England
    >
    > e geoffs@cogs.susx.ac.uk
    > t +44 1273 678525
    > f +44 1273 671320
    > w www.grsampson.net
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >



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