[Corpora-List] 'Standard European English' ?

Parveen Lallmamode parveenqb at hotmail.com
Fri Mar 3 09:12:46 UTC 2006


Re: [Corpora-List] 'Standard European English' ?Thank you all for your comments.

As far as I understand, this English is not fully 'established'. There need be more research not only on the spoken aspect, but also the variations of genres available in it. 

I was astounded when English Language instructors were asked, in my university, to accept 'Standard Published European English' variations in our students' papers while none of us knew what it was. And when I asked for more clarification, I was told that the Head of the English Dept is a linguist, i.e. please don't ask for clarification or question her decisions! 

Anyway, thank you all for your input and please keep posting anything related to it. 

Parveen.
  



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Kate Beeching 
  To: Gloria ; Briony Williams 
  Cc: corpora at lists.uib.no 
  Sent: Thursday, March 02, 2006 6:37 PM
  Subject: RE: [Corpora-List] 'Standard European English' ?


  Not to mention "éventuellement" "éventuel" in French = 'possibly, possible'.

  Some of my MA Translation students have looked at parallel French-English EU texts about topics such as the Erasmus programme. At first I thought the English versions were 'not English' and read as if they were 'French translated'  (lots of nouns ending in -ation!). Finally, however, I decided that this was "Euro-speak" (-babble?") i.e. there is a particular type of English which is used in these contexts. This type of English may be developing at a great rate because often the original documents may be written in English but by non-natives. For example, a Dane wishes to write an EU document so s.he writes it in English.  It is a very interesting topic. At what point do we decide that these documents are not "wrong" but a different/new variety of English and how 'systematic' is this English? (Does it have any rules?),
  Kate

  Dr. Kate Beeching Principal Lecturer, Linguistics and French 
  Award Leader, MA in Translation by Distance Learning 
  Head, International Corpus Linguistics Research Unit (ICLRU) 
  University of the West of England, Bristol 
  Faculty of Humanities, Languages and Social Sciences 
  Frenchay Campus 
  Coldharbour Lane 
  Bristol BS16 1QY 
  Room: 4C16 
  Tel: 0117 32 82385 
  E-mail: Kate.Beeching at uwe.ac.uk 
  Home e-mail: KBeeching at aol.com 



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  From: owner-corpora at lists.uib.no on behalf of Gloria
  Sent: Thu 02/03/2006 1:57 PM
  To: Briony Williams
  Cc: corpora at lists.uib.no
  Subject: Re: [Corpora-List] 'Standard European English' ?


  > Somers, Harold wrote:
  > > Using "eventual(ly)" to mean "if it happens" rather than "final"
  >
  > I believe this is from the German "eventuell".

  In Italian "eventualmente" means the same, "in case" or something like
  that.
  "Eventualmente, ti chiamo" = "If xxx (it is necessary, if I feel like
  doing it, etc.), I'll call you".

  Best,

  Gloria




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