Description
This readable introductory textbook presents a concise survey of corpus linguistics. The first section of the book introduces the key concepts in corpus linguistics and provides a brief history of the discipline. The second section expands the study of language and shows how corpus linguistics can advance our study of words and meaning, the benefits of studying the corpora, and how meaning can best be conceptualised. Explaining corpus linguistics in easy to understand terms, and including a glossary and suggestions for further reading, this book will be useful to students trying to get a grasp on this subject.
Table of Contents
1. Language and Corpus Linguistics - Wolfgang Teubert
1.1 Are all Languages the Same?
1.2 Standard Linguistics and Word Meaning
1.3 Words, Idioms and Collocations
1.4 Corpus Linguistics: A Different Look at Language
1.5 A Brief History of Corpus Linguistics
2. Directions in Corpus Linguistics - Wolfgang Teubert and Anna Cermakova
2.1 Language and Representativeness
2.2 Corpus Typology
2.2.1 Reference Corpus
2.2.2 Monitor Corpus
2.2.3 Parallel Corpora
2.2.4 Internet Corpus
2.3 Meaning in Discourse
2.4 Meaning as Usage and Paraphrase
2.5 Globalisation
2.6 What Corpus Linguistics can tell us about Meaning
2.7 Collocations, Translation and Parallel Corpora
2.8 Conclusion: From Meaning to Understanding
Glossary
Suggestions for Further Reading
Author(s)
Wolfgang Teubert, Wolfgang Teubert is Professor of Corpus Linguistics at the University of Birmingham.
Anna Cermáková,
Anna Cermáková is at the Institute of the Czech National Corpus, Charles University, Prague.
Reviews
"Reading this book thus helps one gain an insight into the problems of lexicology and of lexicography... This book is without a doubt appealing for everybody interested in lexicology and lexicography"
Barbara Schlucker,
"This book without a doubt is appealing for everybody interested in lexicography who wants to know how corpus linguistic can be used in lexicology and who ideally has some background knowledge about corpus linguistics."—Randall Eggert, The Linguist List
The Linguist List,