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A corpus-based analysis of indefinite article use in London English

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A corpus-based analysis of indefinite article use in London English. / Gabrielatos, Costas; Torgersen, Eivind.
2008. Paper presented at Joint meeting of the Corpus Research Group and the Language Variation and Change Research Group, Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster University.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Gabrielatos, C & Torgersen, E 2008, 'A corpus-based analysis of indefinite article use in London English', Paper presented at Joint meeting of the Corpus Research Group and the Language Variation and Change Research Group, Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster University, 23/06/08.

APA

Gabrielatos, C., & Torgersen, E. (2008). A corpus-based analysis of indefinite article use in London English. Paper presented at Joint meeting of the Corpus Research Group and the Language Variation and Change Research Group, Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster University.

Vancouver

Gabrielatos C, Torgersen E. A corpus-based analysis of indefinite article use in London English. 2008. Paper presented at Joint meeting of the Corpus Research Group and the Language Variation and Change Research Group, Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster University.

Author

Gabrielatos, Costas ; Torgersen, Eivind. / A corpus-based analysis of indefinite article use in London English. Paper presented at Joint meeting of the Corpus Research Group and the Language Variation and Change Research Group, Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster University.

Bibtex

@conference{614d15fbad084686b36e358bc234152e,
title = "A corpus-based analysis of indefinite article use in London English",
abstract = "So far, there has been little collaboration between sociolinguists and corpus linguists. This is surprising, since empirical sociolinguistic research requires large datasets in order to be able to draw reliable conclusions, and corpus linguistics has the tools and methodology to deal with such datasets efficiently and accurately. This study is working towards bridging the gap between these two strands of linguistics. In some British English dialects, speakers may have {\textquoteleft}a{\textquoteright} before words beginning with vowels, where {\textquoteleft}an{\textquoteright} would be expected (in terms of standard English). These dialects thus lack the standard English alternation between {\textquoteleft}a{\textquoteright} and {\textquoteleft}an{\textquoteright}. This is also found in language contact communities, such as London. The presentation outlines the corpus-based examination of indefinite article use by samples of residents in two London Boroughs: Hackney and Havering. The corpus is around 1.4 million words and consists of the transcribed interview data from the Lancaster/Queen Mary ESRC-funded project, Linguistic innovators: the English of adolescents in London. We have examined both the linguistic (phonological) and sociolinguistic contexts in which the indefinite article occurs.",
keywords = "corpus linguistics, sociolinguistics, language variation and change",
author = "Costas Gabrielatos and Eivind Torgersen",
year = "2008",
month = jun,
day = "23",
language = "English",
note = "Joint meeting of the Corpus Research Group and the Language Variation and Change Research Group ; Conference date: 23-06-2008",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - A corpus-based analysis of indefinite article use in London English

AU - Gabrielatos, Costas

AU - Torgersen, Eivind

PY - 2008/6/23

Y1 - 2008/6/23

N2 - So far, there has been little collaboration between sociolinguists and corpus linguists. This is surprising, since empirical sociolinguistic research requires large datasets in order to be able to draw reliable conclusions, and corpus linguistics has the tools and methodology to deal with such datasets efficiently and accurately. This study is working towards bridging the gap between these two strands of linguistics. In some British English dialects, speakers may have ‘a’ before words beginning with vowels, where ‘an’ would be expected (in terms of standard English). These dialects thus lack the standard English alternation between ‘a’ and ‘an’. This is also found in language contact communities, such as London. The presentation outlines the corpus-based examination of indefinite article use by samples of residents in two London Boroughs: Hackney and Havering. The corpus is around 1.4 million words and consists of the transcribed interview data from the Lancaster/Queen Mary ESRC-funded project, Linguistic innovators: the English of adolescents in London. We have examined both the linguistic (phonological) and sociolinguistic contexts in which the indefinite article occurs.

AB - So far, there has been little collaboration between sociolinguists and corpus linguists. This is surprising, since empirical sociolinguistic research requires large datasets in order to be able to draw reliable conclusions, and corpus linguistics has the tools and methodology to deal with such datasets efficiently and accurately. This study is working towards bridging the gap between these two strands of linguistics. In some British English dialects, speakers may have ‘a’ before words beginning with vowels, where ‘an’ would be expected (in terms of standard English). These dialects thus lack the standard English alternation between ‘a’ and ‘an’. This is also found in language contact communities, such as London. The presentation outlines the corpus-based examination of indefinite article use by samples of residents in two London Boroughs: Hackney and Havering. The corpus is around 1.4 million words and consists of the transcribed interview data from the Lancaster/Queen Mary ESRC-funded project, Linguistic innovators: the English of adolescents in London. We have examined both the linguistic (phonological) and sociolinguistic contexts in which the indefinite article occurs.

KW - corpus linguistics

KW - sociolinguistics

KW - language variation and change

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - Joint meeting of the Corpus Research Group and the Language Variation and Change Research Group

Y2 - 23 June 2008

ER -