Sunday, July 16, 2017

IJCL

The 111 most cited articles in 

International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 




1.   Collostructions: Investigating the interaction of words and constructions  
2.   Extending collostructional analysis: A corpus-based perspective on 'alternations'  
3.   From key words to key semantic domains  
4.   The 385+ million word Corpus of Contemporary American English (1990-2008+): Design, architecture, and linguistic insights  
5.   A corpus-driven approach to formulaic language in english: Multi-word patterns in speech and writing  
6.   "Utterly content in each other's company": Semantic prosody and semantic preference  
7.   Automatic analysis of syntactic complexity in second language writing  
8.   From n-gram to skipgram to concgram  
9.   Dispersions and adjusted frequencies in corpora  
10. Corpus linguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis: Examining the ideology of sleaze  
11. Semantic prosody revisited  
12. My version of corpus linguistics  
13. Applying corpus linguistics to pedagogy a critical evaluation  
14. Keyness: Words, parts-of-speech and semantic categories in the character-talk of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet  
15. The design of a corpus of Contemporary Arabic  
16. Two quantitative methods of studying phraseology in English  
17. A critique of the concept of semantic prosody  
18. A corpus-based study of connectors in student writing: Research from the International Corpus of English in Hong Kong (JCE-HK)  
19. Open-source corpora: Using the net to fish for linguistic data  
20. A corpus-based view of similarity and difference in translation  
21. From archive to corpus transcription and annotation in the creation of signed language corpora  
22. Starting with the small words: Patterns, lexis and semantic sequences  
23. Measure Noun constructions: An instance of semantically-driven grammaticalization  
24. 50-something years of work on collocations: What is or should be next   
25. The BEO6 Corpus of British english and recent language change  
26. Modal verbs in TIME: Frequency changes 1923-2006  
27. Lexical bundles and discourse signalling in academic lectures  
28. Using corpora to investigate antonym acquisition  
29. Short term diachronic shifts in part-of-speech frequencies: A comparison of the tagged LOB and F-LOB corpora  
30. A few Frequently Asked Questions about semantic - or evaluative - prosody  
31. CQPweb - Combining power, flexibility and usability in a corpus analysis tool  
32. The use of conjunctive adverbials in the academic papers of advanced Taiwanese EFL learners  
33. A multifactorial corpus analysis of adjective order in English  
34. In search of representativity in specialised corpora: Categorisation through collocation  
35. Genitive and of-construction in modern written English. Processability and human involvement  
36. Understanding Direct Mail Letters as a genre  
37. Cognitive processes as evidence of the idiom principle  
38. Use of signalling nouns in a learner corpus  
39. Gravity counts for the boundaries of collocations  
40. Well I'm not sure I think... The use of well by non-native speakers  
41. Uh and Um as sociolinguistic markers in British English  
42. Type noun uses in the English NP: A case of right to left layering  
43. Linking adverbials: An across-register corpus study and its implications  
44. Sharing sign language data online: Experiences from the ECHO project  
45. The development of Formulaic sequences in first and second language writing: Investigating effects of frequency, association, and native norm  
46. How different is translated chinese from native chinese? A corpus-based study of translation universals  
47. Automatic measurement of syntactic complexity in child language acquisition  
48. "Get us the hell out of here": Key words and trigrams in fictional television series  
49. Lexical gravity across varieties of English: An ICE-based study of n-grams in Asian Englishes  
50. The function of metaphor: Deloping a corpus-based perspective  
51. The advantage of using relational databases for large corpora: Speed, advanced queries, and unlimited annotation  
52. Corpus linguistics and theoretical linguistics: A love-hate relationship? Not necessarily...  
53. Multi-dimensional register classification using bigrams  
54. Clause alignment for Hong Kong legal texts: A lexical-based approach  
55. Research on advanced student writing across disciplines and levels: Introducing the Michigan Corpus of Upper-level Student Papers  
56. Indirect anaphora: Testing the limits of corpus-based linguistics  
57. Concordancing oneself: Constructing individual textual profiles  
58. The IJS-ELAN Slovene-English parallel corpus  
59. Coming to terms with conversational grammar: 'Dislocation and 'dysfluency'  
60. Two methods for extracting "specific" single-word terms from specialized corpora: Experimentation and evaluation  
61. A usage-based approach to argument structure: 'Remember' and 'forget' in spoken English  
62. Testing the sub-test: An analysis of English -ic and -ical adjectives  
63. Automatic extraction of meaningful units from corpora: A corpus-driven approach using the word stroke  
64. Comparing corpora  
65. Towards a methodology for exploiting specialized target language corpora as translation resources  
66. Dynamic visualizations of language change: Motion charts on the basis of bivariate and multivariate data from diachronic corpora  
67. A grammatical formalism based on patterns of part of speech tags  
68. The semantic variation of NEED TO in four recent British English corpora  
69. Frequency of 'core idioms' in the British National Corpus (BNC)  
70. It-extraposition in English: A functional view  
71. Quantifying the shift towards empirical methods  
72. A regional analysis of contraction rate in written Standard American English  
73. Keywords and frequent phrases of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice: A corpus-stylistic analysis  
74. A study of backchannels in regional varieties of English, using corpus mark-up as the means of identification  
75. Lexical cohesion: Corpus linguistic theory and its application in English language teaching  
76. An analysis of english punctuation: The special case of comma  
77. Social differentiation in the use of english vocabulary: Some analyses of the conversational component of the british national corpus  
78. Collocations in context: A new perspective on collocation networks  
79. The genitive alternation in Chinese and German ESL learners: Towards a multifactorial notion of context in learner corpus research  
80. Overuse or underuse: A corpus study of English phrasal verb use by Chinese, British and American university students  
81. Short papers: The case of InterCorp, a multilingual parallel corpus  
82. A corpus driven study of the potential for vocabulary learning through watching movies  
83. Cognitive verbs in context: A contrastive analysis of English and French argumentative discourse   
84. Use of signalling nouns across L1 and L2 writer corpora  
85. Is it a chief, main, major, primary, or principal concern?: A corpus-based behavioral profile study of the near-synonyms  
86. I entirely understand is a Blairism: The methodology of identifying idiolectal collocations  
87. Sinclair, lexicography, and the Cobuild Project: The application of theory  
88. Using corpora in machine-learning chatbot systems  
89. Creating and using Web corpora  
90. Individual differences and usage-based grammar  
91. Agentivity as a determinant of lexico-grammatical variation in L2 academic writing  
92. Lexical frames in academic prose and conversation  
93. Papers: Does semantic tagging identify cultural change in British and American English?  
94. The modals ARE declining: Reply to Neil Millar's "Modal verbs in TIME: Frequency changes 1923-2006", International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 14:2 (2009), 191-220  
95. Corpus linguistics and theoretical linguistics  
96. Cultural differences in academic discourse: Evidence from first-person verb use in the methods sections of medical research articles  
97. Believe-type raising-to-object and raising-to-subject verbs in English and Dutch: A contrastive investigation in diachronic construction grammar  
98. Collocations and colligations associated with discourse functions of unspecific anaphoric nouns  
99. Emphasizers in spoken and written academic discourse: The case of really  
100.     The representativeness of Czech corpora  
101.     The notion of a "lemma": Headwords, roots and lexical sets  
102.     The language of Islamic extremism: Towards an automated identification of beliefs, motivations and justifications  
103.     The peaks and troughs of corpus-based contextual analysis  
104.     The use of reformulation markers in Business Management research articles: An intercultural analysis  
105.     Fluency versus accuracy in advanced spoken learner language: A multi-method approach  
106.     More than a peephole: Using large and diverse online corpora  
107.     Using large corpora of conversation to investigate narrative: The case of interjections in conversational storytelling performance  
108.     Prosodic and syntactic-pragmatic mechanisms of grammatical variation: The impact of a postverbal constituent on the word order in Dutch clause final verb clusters  
109.     Syllable contractions in a Mandarin conversational dialogue corpus  
110.     SPAACy - A semi-automated tool for annotating dialogue acts  
111.     Significant or random?: A critical review of sociolinguistic generalisations based on large corpora 



Eminent Authors


Teubert, W.
Mahlberg, M.
Gries, S.Th.
Lu, X.
Baker, P.
Barlow, M.
Biber, D.
Rayson, P.
Warren, M.
Čermák, F.
Stefanowitsch, A.



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