Advanced search

Subscribe to our newsletter and you'll continuously be informed about our new books, series and journals.

You can customize this e-mail newsletter to your particular needs and interests.

Newsletters include special discount codes.

To subscribe or change existing preferences press the subscribe button






Bookcover
Corpus Linguistics and the Web.

HUNDT, Marianne, Nadja NESSELHAUF and Carolin BIEWER (Eds.)
Amsterdam/New York, NY, 2007, VI, 305 pp.
Hb: 978-90-420-2128-0 / 90-420-2128-4
€ 65 / US$ 88

Series:
Language and Computers - Studies in Practical Linguistics
 59


“In this volume many of the major issues in using the web for linguistic research are discussed and clarified … This very timely volume gives a good overview of a fast-growing field.”
Journal of Corpus Linguistics 13:4 (2008)

"Corpus linguistics and the web makes up a valuable contribution to corpus linguistics in the fourth age. With its general approach to both potentials and problems in web linguistics, it fills an important gap in the description of an auspicious research methodology which is zooming rapidly into the twenty-first century with a fair share of growing pains. … it offers a wealth of insight into common approaches to web-based language study, with its strength lying in the manifold treatment of web methodology, often in conjunction with traditional corpus methods, and in its variety of interesting research results, either in a WaC or WfC framework. … this publication constitutes another important step in the establishment of web linguistics as the currently most rewarding approach in corpus linguistics."
ICAME journal 32 – April 2008

Using the Web as Corpus is one of the recent challenges for corpus linguistics. This volume presents a current state-of-the-arts discussion of the topic. The articles address practical problems such as suitable linguistic search tools for accessing the www, the question of register variation, or they probe into methods for culling data from the web. The book also offers a wide range of case studies, covering morphology, syntax, lexis, as well as synchronic and diachronic variation in English. These case studies make use of the two approaches to the www in corpus linguistics – web-as-corpus and web-for-corpus-building. The case studies demonstrate that web data can provide useful additional evidence for a broad range of research questions.

Contents
Marianne HUNDT, Nadja NESSELHAUF and Carolin BIEWER: Corpus linguistics and the web
Accessing the web as corpus
Anke LÜDELING, Stefan EVERT and Marco BARONI: Using web data for linguistic purposes
William H. FLETCHER: Concordancing the web: promise and problems, tools and techniques
Antoinette RENOUF, Andrew KEHOE and Jayeeta BANERJEE: WebCorp: an integrated system for web text search
Compiling corpora from the internet
Sebastian HOFFMANN: From webpage to mega-corpus: the CNN transcripts
Claudia CLARIDGE: Constructing a corpus from the web: message boards
Douglas BIBER and Jerry KURJIAN: Towards a taxonomy of web registers and text types: a multidimensional analysis
Critical voices
Geoffrey LEECH: New resources, or just better old ones? The Holy Grail of representativeness
Graeme KENNEDY: An under-exploited resource: using the BNC for exploring the nature of language learning
Language variation and change
Anette ROSENBACH: Exploring constructions on the web: a case study
Günter ROHDENBURG: Determinants of grammatical variation in English and the formation / confirmation of linguistic hypotheses by means of internet data
Britta MONDORF: Recalcitrant problems of comparative alternation and new insights emerging from internet data
Christian MAIR: Change and variation in present-day English: integrating the analysis of closed corpora and web-based monitoring
Marianne HUNDT and Carolin BIEWER: The dynamics of inner and outer circle varieties in the South Pacific and East Asia
Lieselotte ANDERWALD: ‘He rung the bell’ and ‘she drunk ale’ – non-standard past tense forms in traditional British dialects and on the internet
Nadja NESSELHAUF: Diachronic analysis with the internet? Will and shall in ARCHER and in a corpus of e-texts from the web



Tijnmuiden 7
1046 AK Amsterdam
The Netherlands
T: +31-20-611 48 21
F: +31-20-447 29 79

248 East 44th Street - 2nd floor
New York, NY 10017
USA
T: 1-800-225-3998
F: 1-800-853-3881
Toll-free in the USA

info@rodopi.nl