26.845, Books: Signalling Nouns in English: Flowerdew, Forest

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LINGUIST List: Vol-26-845. Mon Feb 09 2015. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 26.845, Books: Signalling Nouns in English: Flowerdew, Forest

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Date: Mon, 09 Feb 2015 17:44:56
From: Katie Laker [klaker at cambridge.org]
Subject: Signalling Nouns in English: Flowerdew, Forest

 


Title: Signalling Nouns in English 
Subtitle: A Corpus-Based Discourse Approach 
Publication Year: 2015 
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
	   http://cambridge.org
	

Book URL: http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/languages-linguistics/discourse-analysis/signalling-nouns-english-corpus-based-discourse-approach?format=HB 


Author: John Flowerdew
Author: Richard W. Forest

Hardback: ISBN:  9781107022119 Pages:  Price: U.S. $ 99.00
Hardback: ISBN:  9781107022119 Pages:  Price: U.K. £ 65.00


Abstract:

Signalling nouns (SNs) are abstract nouns like 'fact', 'idea', 'problem' and 'result', which are non-specific in their meaning when considered in isolation and specific in their meaning by reference to their linguistic context. SNs contribute to cohesion and evaluation in discourse. This work offers the first book-length study of the SN phenomenon to treat the functional and discourse features of the category as primary. Using a balanced corpus of authentic data, the book explores the lexicogrammatical and discourse features of SNs in academic journal articles, textbooks, and lectures across a range of disciplines in the natural and social sciences. The book will be essential reading for researchers and advanced students of semantics, syntax, corpus linguistics and discourse analysis, in addition to scholars and teachers in the field of English for academic purposes.

1. Introduction; 2. Grammatical features of signalling nouns; 3. Semantic features; 4. Discourse features; 5. Criteria for determining what constitutes a signalling noun in this study; 6. Corpus, methodology, annotation system, and reporting of the data; 7. Set of examples; 8. Overview of signalling noun distributions in the corpus; 9. Overview of semantic categories; 10. Overview of lexicogrammatical and discourse pattern frequencies; 11. Conclusion; References; Appendix A. The overall structure of the corpus; Appendix B. List of texts that make up the corpus; Appendix C. Lemmatised SNs in descending order according to normalised frequency; Appendix D. Non-lemmatised SNs in descending order according to normalised frequency; Appendix E. Lemmatised SNs in alphabetical order; Appendix F. Non-lemmatised SNs in alphabetical order; Appendix G. Frequency of SNs in different semantic categories. 



Linguistic Field(s): Discourse Analysis
                     Linguistic Theories
                     Semantics
                     Syntax
                     Text/Corpus Linguistics

Subject Language(s): English (eng)


Written In: English  (eng)

See this book announcement on our website: 
http://linguistlist.org/pubs/books/get-book.cfm?BookID=80714




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