Publications
2022
About the volume:
With its detailed overview of L2 and L3 acquisition and contribution toward ongoing debates on the advantages of being bilingual and multilingual, this book will be of interest to students and scholars in applied linguistics, foreign language acquisition, foreign language teaching, and learner corpus research.
2021
About the volume:
Contributions
Introduction: Genderlectal Variation in the English Speaking World
Tobias Bernaisch
Localisation, Globalisation and Gender in Discourse-Pragmatics Variation in Ghanaian English
Beke Hansen
Sociolinguistic Variation in Intensifier Usage in Indian and British English
Robert Fuchs
Tag Questions and Gender in Indian English
Claudia Lange and Sven Leuckert
Hedges and Gender in the Inner and Expanding Circle
Tobias Bernaisch
The Role of Gender in Postcolonial Syntactic Choice-Making
Stefan Th. Gries, Benedikt Heller and Nina Funke
Social Constraints on Syntactic Variation
Melanie Röthlisberger
Linguistic Colloquialisation, Democratisation and Gender in Asian Englishes
Lucía Loureiro-Porto
Gender, Writing and Editing in South African Englishes: A Case Study of the Genitive Alternation
Melanie A. Law and Haidee Kotze
2019
About the volume:
All papers include sections on practical and concrete language-pedagogical applications. This volume will be of significant interest to researchers working in corpus linguistics, learner corpus research, second language acquisition and English for Academic and Specific Purposes, as well to language teachers and materials developers.
Introduction: Learner Corpora and Language Teaching
Sandra Götz and Joybrato Mukherjee
The
Trinitiy Lancaster
Corpus
: Applications in language teaching and materials development
Dana Gablasova, Vaclav Brezina and Tony McEnery
To automated generation of test questions on the basis of error annotations in EFL essays: A time-saving tool?
Olga Vinogradova
Complexity and qualitative lexical knowledge: A corpus-based study on the use of take in German learner English
Albert Biel
Cohesion or
coesione
? L1 Italian learners' use of linking adjuncts in academic essays
Meredith D'Arienzo
Researching learner language through POS keyword and syntactic complexity analyses
Pascual Pérez-Paredes and María Belén Díez-Bedmar
Direct quotation in second language writing: A corpus-based study of intertextuality in academic learner English
Leonie Wiemeyer
Comparing errors across an L2 spoken and written error-tagged Japanese EFL learner corpus
Mariko Abe
Speech rate revisited: The effect of task design on speech rate
Tomáš Gráf
English intonation of advanced learners: A contrastive interlanguage analysis
Karin Puga
The Use of Smallwords in the Speech of German Learners of English: A Corpus-Based Study of the Factors of Instruction and Natural Exposure
Anna Rosen
Integrating Corpus Literacy into Language Teacher Education: The Case of Learner Corpora
Marcus Callies
2018
About the volume:
It was originally published as a special issue of the International Journal of Learner Corpora Research 2:2 (2016) .
2016
About the International Journal of Learner Corpus Research :
Introduction: Linguistic innovations in EFL and ESL: Rethinking the linguistic creativity of non-native English speakers
Sandra C. Deshors, Sandra Götz and Samantha Laporte
“This hair-style called as ‘duck tail’”: The ‘intrusive
as
’-construction in South Asian varieties of English and Learner Englishes
Christopher Koch, Claudia Lange and Sven Leuckert
Detecting innovations in a parsed corpus of learner English
Gerold Schneider and Gaëtanelle Gilquin
The innovative progressive aspect of Black South African English: The role of language proficiency and normative processes
Bertus van Rooy and Haidee Kruger
Towards a process-oriented approach to comparing EFL and ESL varieties: A corpus-study of lexical innovations
Marcus Callies
In case of
innovation: Academic phraseology in the Three Circles
Alison Edwards and Rutger-Jan Lange
Innovative conversions in South-East Asian Englishes: Reassessing ESL status
Stephanie Horch
The fate of linguistic innovations: Jersey English and French learner English compared
Anna Rosen
“It’s always different when you look something from the inside”: Linguistic innovation in a corpus of ELF Skype conversations
Marie-Louise Brunner, Stefan Diemer and Selina Schmidt
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journal's website
Academic literacy used to be considered a complex set of skills that develop automatically as a by-product of academic socialization. Since the Bologna Reform with its shorter degree programmes, however, it has been realized that these skills need to be fostered actively. Simultaneously, writing skills development at all levels of education has been faced with the challenge of increasingly multilingual and multicultural groups of pupils and students. This book addresses the questions of how both academic and professional writing skills can be fostered under these conditions and how the development of writing skills can be measured.
Contributions:
Christine S. Sing: Writing for specific purposes: Developing business students' ability to «technicalize» – Hans Malmström/Diane Pecorari/Magnus Gustafsson: Coverage and development of academic vocabulary in assessment texts in English Medium Instruction – Liana Konstantinidou/Joachim Hoefele/Otto Kruse: Assessing writing in vocational education and training schools: Results from an intervention study – Susanne Göpferich/Imke Neumann: Writing competence profiles as an assessment grid? - Students' L1 and L2 writing competences and their development after one semester of instruction – Sandra Ballweg: Portfolios as a means of developing and assessing writing skills – Sabine Dengscherz/Melanie Steindl: «Prepare an outline first and then just write spontaneously» - An analysis of students' writing strategies and their attitudes towards professional writing
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2015
This book offers the first in-depth corpus-based description of written Sri Lankan English. In comparison to British and Indian English, lexical and lexicogrammatical features of Sri Lankan English are analysed in a complex corpus environment comprising data from the respective components of the International Corpus of English, newspapers and online sources to explore the status of Sri Lankan English as a variety in its own right. The evolution of Sri Lankan English is depicted against the background of historical as well as sociolinguistic considerations and allows deriving a fine-grained model of the emergence of distinctive structural profiles of postcolonial Englishes developing in a multitude of norm orientations. This book is highly relevant to readers interested in Sri Lankan English and South Asian Englishes. It also offers more general sociolinguistic perspectives on the dynamics of postcolonial Englishes world-wide and on the inextricable link between language and identity.
Find the full description as well as order information on the publisher's website .
Find the full description as well as order information on the publisher's website .
Find the full description as well as order information on the publisher's website .
Find the full description as well as order information on the publisher's website .
Find the full description as well as order information on the publisher's website .