Words, Grammar, Text: Revisiting the Work of John SinclairRosamund Moon John Benjamins Publishing, 2009 - 124 páginas John Sinclair s work is widely known and has had a far-reaching influence, particularly in the areas of corpus linguistics, lexis, phraseology, lexicography, grammar, and discourse analysis. This collection of papers, written by former colleagues at Birmingham University, looks at some key writings by John Sinclair, with the intention of showing why his ideas are of lasting significance. Contributions deal with the Cobuild Project (directed by Sinclair) and its innovative first dictionary; collocation and the Open Choice and Idiom Principles; the interactions between and interdependence of phraseology and grammar; semantic prosody; and the construction of meaning in text. This volume was originally published as a Special Issue of "International Journal of Corpus Linguistics" 12:2 (2007)." |
Índice
Sinclair lexicography and the Cobuild Project | 1 |
Sinclair on collocation | 23 |
Notes on the ofness of of Sinclair and grammar | 39 |
Sinclair pattern grammar and the question of hatred | 59 |
Semantic prosody revisited | 85 |
Trust and text text as trust | 105 |
123 | |
The series Benjamins Current Topics | 125 |
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Words, Grammar, Text: Revisiting the work of John Sinclair Rosamund Moon Vista previa restringida - 2009 |
Términos y frases comunes
adjunct analysis approach budge called caused CCELD claim clear Cobuild Collins collocation common complement considered context corpora corpus course defined definitions depend described developed dictionary discourse discussion English entries evaluation evidence example expression fact Figure focus Francis frequent function given grammar hatred head Hunston ideas impact implications important indicate instance interesting interpretation issue John kind language learners less lexical lexicography lexis lines linguistics London look meaning negative noun object observed occur Oxford particular pattern grammar patterns performance perhaps persistent phrase position possible predict prepositional Press principle problem production prospected question reading realised refer relation relationship represents seems semantic prosody sense sentence Sinclair speakers structure suggests syntactic taken talk theory thing tion traditional trust unit University verb word