An Introduction to Applied Linguistics
Gorgeous. The sky is absolutely beautiful
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Norbert Schmitt (ed.) - An Introduction to Applied Linguistics (2010, Routledge) - libgen.li
Gorgeous. The sky is absolutely beautiful.
Speaker 2: Beautiful. Another feature related to the negotiation of meaning is the display of opposites in the same utterance, which enables speakers to focus lexical meaning: Speaker 1: I can take a bit of the burden off Jim. Sometimes it’s hard but I sometimes really feel as though I’m bashing my head against a wall though. Speaker 2: Well it is it is hard isn’t it. It’s not easy to go forward. McCarthy (1988) refers to ‘instantial’ lexical meanings in describing synonyms and antonyms used in this way in context, to distinguish them from out-of-context semantic meanings, such as are found in dictionary entries for single words. What is very clear is that the native speaker or expert user’s mental lexicon of any language is organized in terms of meaning connections such as similarity and opposition, and that this is not a mere abstract convenience (see Schmitt, 2000). Synonyms and antonyms are speedily accessed and used fluently by speakers in 66 An Introduction to Applied Linguistics conversation as part of their basic strategy for creating meaning. The implications of this are that the abstract domains of lexical semantics and the pedagogical issues of learning and using vocabulary should by no means be divorced from what happens in ordinary communication. Repetition and relexicalization are part of the speaking skill, and in the case of relexicalization (that is, the ability to retrieve synonyms and antonyms quickly), present a considerable challenge to second language learners. Corpus Linguistics and Variation in Discourse In recent years, discourse analysts have been able to greatly expand the scope of their work thanks to computer software that can analyse large corpora (see Chapter 6, Corpus Linguistics). Corpus linguistics sprang from a desire to be more objective about language and to free description from subjective intuition (see Halliday (1966) and Sinclair (1966) for early arguments in favour of using corpora). Corpus linguists believe that external evidence, looking at language use, is a better source for description than internal evidence, or native speaker intuition (for a good introduction, see Biber, Conrad and Reppen, 1998). Broadly, corpus linguistics may be performed in two ways: quantitative and qualitative. The quantitative approach usually looks for the largest corpus possible (up to 100–600 million words at the time of writing), from as wide a range of sources as possible. These data are then analysed computationally and the output comprises sets of figures that tell the discourse analyst about the frequency of occurrence of words, phrases, collocations or structures. These statistics are then used to produce dictionaries, grammars and so on. But for the discourse analyst, statistical facts raise the question ‘Why?’, and answers can only be found by looking at the contexts of the texts in the corpus. Discourse analysts, therefore, work with corpora in a qualitative way. For example, a spoken corpus frequency list might show an unexpectedly high frequency for words such as absolutely, exactly and brilliant compared with a written corpus frequency list. Here are some frequency figures for absolutely: CIC* written: five million CANCODE* spoken: word sample five million words absolutely 276 1234 *CIC = Cambridge International Corpus; CANCODE = Cambridge and Nottingham Corpus of Discourse in English. © Both corpora are copyright Cambridge University Press. The discourse analyst then seeks an explanation for this, and finds that in the spoken corpus, these high-frequency words often occur as single-word responses to incoming talk, for example: Speaker 1: I thought it was wonderful, you know. Speaker 2: Yeah, absolutely. In this way, spoken discourse analysts use corpus statistics to get at notions such as listener feedback, turn-taking distributions, the distribution of items such as hedges and intensifiers (which often reveal much about politeness and communicative strategies) and the frequency and distribution of discourse markers such as you know, I mean, you see, well, right, anyway, okay, etc. Written text analysts 67 Discourse Analysis can gain similar information from statistical procedures, as well as the frequency and distribution of cohesive devices, how academic writers hedge or how they cite others’ work, and so on. Such information is immensely useful to those designing language teaching materials, since a corpus offers direct evidence of language use on a wide scale. McCarthy (1998) is one example of using a corpus to pursue answers to questions that interest discourse analysts and language teachers alike. There is no doubt that corpus linguistics will continue to influence discourse analysis as corpora become more available and software easier to manipulate, and that the results of corpus-based discourse analysis will feed through to the teaching of speaking and writing in language pedagogy. Implications for Pedagogy The ideas outlined in this chapter have the following direct implications for language pedagogy: • Discourse analysts describe and analyse how language is structured in different contexts of use. This enables language practitioners to more precisely delineate in syllabuses and materials the different genres of language with which learners will need to engage, and to select and evaluate discourses that are relevant to Download 1.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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