Teaching & Learning Guide for: Corpus Linguistics in the UK: Resources for Sociolinguistic Research

  • Anderson W
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Abstract

Linguistics has drawn on the large quantities of authentic data contained in language corpora for several decades now. While debates continue regarding the nature and interpretation of such data, it is generally accepted that corpus methodologies offer a valuable perspective on language, one that complements the introspective and elicited data used in different sub-fields of linguistics. Increasingly, language corpora can be searched or downloaded over the Internet, and are now therefore very readily accessible. Many also include demographic or textual metadata that make them invaluable as data for sociolinguistics. While existing corpora may have some drawbacks (e.g. where the corpus design is not ideally suited to the study in hand, or available corpora do not have appropriate mark-up), they offer great savings in time and effort compared to creating a new corpus. Moreover, especially given the increasing availability of spoken texts in corpora, they constitute excellent resources for students of different levels, for teachers looking for a quick way to demonstrate a feature of language, and for researchers testing linguistic hypotheses. Adapted from the source document

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Anderson, W. (2009). Teaching & Learning Guide for: Corpus Linguistics in the UK: Resources for Sociolinguistic Research. Language and Linguistics Compass, 3(1), 509–516. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-818x.2008.00106.x

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