[Corpora-List] Announcement: Online Launch of Scottish Corpus of Texts and Speech (SCOTS)

From: Dr Wendy Anderson (W.Anderson@englang.arts.gla.ac.uk)
Date: Tue Nov 30 2004 - 16:53:35 MET

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    Announcement: Online Launch of Scottish Corpus of Texts and Speech (SCOTS)

    The Scottish Corpus of Texts and Speech project (SCOTS) has launched its
    online corpus - on St Andrew's Day, 30th November 2004. This new resource,
    which is freely and publicly available, captures the languages of Scotland,
    by bringing together written, spoken, audio and video texts. Initially we
    are making available close to 400 texts, around half a million words in
    total, ranging from Broad Scots to Scottish English. SCOTS already contains
    a wide variety of types of text: prose, poetry, drama, essays,
    correspondence, business writing. Audio and video material comes complete
    with transcriptions, and access to the original sound or video. All of the
    texts are accompanied by comprehensive sociolinguistic information about the
    text itself and its author.

    To find out more about the SCOTS project or to browse or search the corpus,
    please visit the project website at www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk. The corpus
    itself will be accessible from this site from 30th November. SCOTS is an
    ongoing project, and to give as accurate a picture as possible of the
    languages of Scotland, we need more texts. We encourage anyone who might be
    able to contribute to the resource by donating texts (either written or
    spoken) to contact us, by email or through the website.

    The Scottish Corpus of Texts and Speech (SCOTS) is a venture by the
    Department of English Language and STELLA project at the University of
    Glasgow. The first stage of the project was grant-funded by the Engineering
    and Physical Sciences Research Council; the current three-year stage is
    funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Board (www.ahrb.ac.uk). The AHRB
    funds postgraduate training and research in the arts and humanities, from
    archaeology and English literature to design and dance. The quality and
    range of research supported not only provides social and cultural benefits
    but also contributes to the economic success of the UK. For further
    information on the AHRB, please see www.ahrb.ac.uk

    ...................................
    Dr Wendy J. Anderson
    Research Assistant
    Scottish Corpus of Texts and Speech
    Department of English Language
    University of Glasgow
    12 University Gardens
    Glasgow
    G12 8QQ
    Scotland, UK

    Website: http://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk



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