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    Corpora and the study of spoken language (Pre-published version)

    Citation

    McCarthy, M.J. and O'Keeffe, A. (2008) “Corpora and the Study of Spoken Language”. In: A, Ludeling, M. Kytö and T. McEnery (Eds). Handbook of Corpus Linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 1-16.
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    Book Chapter (146.7Kb)
    Date
    2008
    Author
    O'Keeffe, Anne
    McCarthy, Michael
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
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    McCarthy, M.J. and O'Keeffe, A. (2008) “Corpora and the Study of Spoken Language”. In: A, Ludeling, M. Kytö and T. McEnery (Eds). Handbook of Corpus Linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 1-16.
    Abstract
    Spoken corpora have evolved over the 40 last four decades from early attempts at corpus-building for the purposes of better understanding such phenomena as first-language acquisition, social variation and conversational structure, 45 to the large, general spoken corpora of today, which have found applications in a variety of contexts from speech recognition, lexicography, sociolinguistics and first and second 50 language acquisition. In this article we focus on spoken corpora and their applications in linguistics and applied linguistics, rather than on ‘speech corpora’, which are typically collected 55 for the purposes of improving technology, a distinction discussed at greater length by Wichmann in article 15; see also article 32.
    Keywords
    Corpora
    Spoken language
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    Mouton de Gruyter
    License URI
    https://www.degruyter.com/view/serial/39720
    URI
    https://dspace.mic.ul.ie/handle/10395/2879
    ISBN
    9783110207330
    Collections
    • English Language and Literature (Peer-reviewed publications)

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