[Corpora-List] An Acronymical Corpus? was Re: Call for papers

Thomas L. Packer tpacker at byu.net
Thu Jun 3 20:38:14 UTC 2010


FYI, this could be offensive to some, as well as off-topic for this list.

Thomas L. Packer
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


-----Original Message-----
From: corpora-bounces at uib.no [mailto:corpora-bounces at uib.no] On Behalf Of
Rob Malouf
Sent: Thursday, June 03, 2010 9:52 AM
To: Trevor Jenkins
Cc: Corpora list
Subject: Re: [Corpora-List] An Acronymical Corpus? was Re: Call for papers

Well, there's this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIM1c9ksr5k

---
Rob Malouf <rmalouf at mail.sdsu.edu>
Department of Linguistics and Asian/Middle Eastern Languages
San Diego State University



On Jun 3, 2010, at 8:32 AM, Trevor Jenkins wrote:

> On Thu, 3 Jun 2010, John F. Sowa <sowa at bestweb.net> wrote:
> 
> This post and its follow-ups got me thinking about whether a corpus exists
> of entire conversations conducted using acronyms. Readily visible in
> text-speek/SMS of course but I was thinking of more real-world settings.
> 
>> The New York Times has an editorial policy that every acronym must
>> be written in full at first use.  That is a good practice to follow
>> with sentences like the following:
>> 
>>> We welcome papers that examine LSP in written and oral discourse
>>> and genres from a wide variety of methodologies and theoretical
>>> frameworks, including interdisciplinary research.
>> 
>> The pointer at the end goes to a file that has the full phrase,
>> Language for Specific Purposes, and cites a reference in 2006
>> as the source.  Perhaps the in-crowd might know that, but if they
>> want to attract people from different "theoretical frameworks,"
>> they might consider the NYT style.
>> 
>> Furthermore, the full announcement doesn't mention the older
>> term 'sublanguage', which has many more hits on Google,
>> including a Wikipedia article.  An even older term is
>> Wittgenstein's 'language games'.
>> 
>> By the way, the first hit on Google Scholar that relates
>> the acronym LSP to language is to a paper that talks about
>> Line Spectrum Pairs for speech analysis-synthesis.
>> 
>> John Sowa
>> 
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>> 
> 
> Regards, Trevor
> 
> <>< Re: deemed!
> 
> 
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> 


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