Sociolinguist whose work focuses on linguistic prescriptivism and discursive practices of online communities. Address: Harmony Building Oude Kijk in Het Jatstraat 26 9712 EK Groningen
This chapter focuses on the variation in copy editors' treatment of the prescriptive rule... more This chapter focuses on the variation in copy editors' treatment of the prescriptive rule against the singular use of data. Data has been reinterpreted as a mass noun in modern English, with the meaning of agglomeration of pieces of information. To test the extent to which this prescriptive rule is still applied, copy editors across the English-speaking world were solicited through an online survey to edit the same fragments of academic writing. The changes with respect to their treatment of data indicate that age, variety, intra-linguistic factors and prescriptive guidelines play a role in shaping the respondents’ copy-editing practices.
Implicit and Explicit Language Attitudes: Mapping Linguistic Prejudice and Attitude Change in Eng... more Implicit and Explicit Language Attitudes: Mapping Linguistic Prejudice and Attitude Change in England Robert M. McKenzie and Andrew McNeill (2023) New York and London: Routledge, 194 pp.
The pro-eating-disorder community is almost exclusively an online community of individuals who cl... more The pro-eating-disorder community is almost exclusively an online community of individuals who claim that eating disorders are not an illness, but rather a lifestyle choice. This study offers an insight into the ideologies constructed in the pro-eating-disorder online discourse by using micro and macro levels of critical discourse analysis (CDA) on 19 blogs written by the self-declared members of the community. Linguistic analysis of the pro-eating-disorder discourse has been largely under-represented and this study is the first to use a corpus-linguistics approach to CDA in analysing the websites’ content. The results of the analysis show that the pro-eating-disorder community constructs the ideology of eating disorders as a life-style via demedicalised reference to the illness. The study also elaborates on the construction of the negative image of “an outsider” (any person not belonging to the community) as an element of self-determination. By using the corpus linguistic technique...
How word choice matters: An analysis of adjective-noun collocations in a corpus of learner essays... more How word choice matters: An analysis of adjective-noun collocations in a corpus of learner essays Foreign language learners ’ choice of collocations is traditionally considered to be one of the main markers of foreignlanguageness (Korosadowitz-Struzynska 1980: 115), hence relevant in achieving a high degree of compe-tence in the target language. In this study we analyse the Croatian Corpus of English Learner Essays (CELE), which consists of 298 argumentative essays written as part of the state school-leaving exam. The corpus, consisting of over 74k tokens was collected in 10 different counties, and the essays were produced in 2010 and 2011. The learner’s use of adjective-noun collocations is compared against both findings from a native speaker corpus (BNC) and a corpus of learner English (ICLE). Instead of viewing learner usage of colloca-tions as deficient, the claims about the overuse and the underuse of statistical-ly significant collocations are made on the basis of joint findin...
Public debates on language use today have switched platforms from newspaper columns to social med... more Public debates on language use today have switched platforms from newspaper columns to social media, and instead of turning the pages of printed usage guides, English speakers most commonly turn to the internet for usage advice. One of the most successful web-based usage guides, here referred to as usage guides 2.0, is the educational podcast ‘Grammar Girl’s Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing’, which is also available in blog format enabling comments from the audience. This paper presents an analysis of the blog entries and comments from this podcast with a two-fold aim. First, Grammar Girl, as a web-based usage guide, is compared to traditional usage guides available in the HUGE database in order to shed light on potential changes within the usage guide genre that have occurred in the new medium. Second, the analysis of the blog comments attempts to provide a systematic overview of online metalinguistic discussions.
Foreign language learners’ choice of collocations istraditionally considered tobeoneofthemainmark... more Foreign language learners’ choice of collocations istraditionally considered tobeoneofthemainmarkersof foreignlanguageness (Korosadowitz-Struzynska 1980: 115), hence relevant in achieving a high degree of compe-tence in the target language. In this study we analyse the Croatian Corpus ofEnglish Learner Essays (CELE), which consists of 298 argumentative essayswritten as part of the state school-leaving exam. The corpus, consisting ofover 74k tokens was collected in 10 different counties, and the essays wereproducedin2010and2011.Thelearner’suseof adjective-noun collocationsis compared against both findings from a native speaker corpus (BNC) and acorpus of learner English (ICLE). Instead of viewing learner usage of colloca-tions as deficient, the claims about the overuse and the underuse of statisti-cally significant collocations are made on the basis of joint findings from theBNC and the ICLE. This approach demonstrates how native speaker data canbe used for comparison, without being ...
Germany’s recognition of Slovenia and Croatia on December 23, 1991 was the first test of the comm... more Germany’s recognition of Slovenia and Croatia on December 23, 1991 was the first test of the common foreign EC policy, and it is still considered to be one of the likely triggers of the armed conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina to date. This work focuses on the representation of these events in mass print media on a corpus of more than 300 broadsheet newspaper articles published in the US and the UK in the beginning of the 1990s. By combining the methodological approaches of Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and Critical Metaphor Analysis (CMA), this study clarifies the media representations of the new political role Germany asserted in international foreign policy post-unification after decades of being portrayed as an economic giant, but a political dwarf. The linguistic analysis is embedded in historical, political, socio-philosophical media studies and theoretical accounts of discourse analysts on the role of the media in the Habermasian public sphere.
As a result of the Russian military intervention in Ukraine (since 2014), the pro-Kremlin media p... more As a result of the Russian military intervention in Ukraine (since 2014), the pro-Kremlin media propaganda within and outside of Russia’s borders has become highly topical throughout the past year ...
The improper use of the possessive apostrophe has for a long time been a subject of concern among... more The improper use of the possessive apostrophe has for a long time been a subject of concern among the authors of usage guides in English. Apostrophes do not represent any sounds, and since nouns in the genitive, and plural nominative and accusative nouns with few exceptions sound the same, their spelling distinctions are purely grammatical (Bryant et al., 1997: 93). Because the sign exists only in the written language, its usage has been rather unstable ever since it was first introduced to the English language in the sixteenth century to mark dropped letters (Little, 1986: 15−16), and it was not until the eighteenth century when the possessive apostrophe was first introduced (Crystal, 2003: 68). The usage guide database HUGE (Hyper Usage Guide of English), which is built by Robin Straaijer as part of the ‘Bridging the Unbridgeable’ project that Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade wrote about in an earlier issue of English Today, proves that apostrophe ‘misuse’ is the most popular topic i...
When I launched an online survey last December with the aim of learning about people's practi... more When I launched an online survey last December with the aim of learning about people's practices of looking up usage advice, I anticipated that searching for answers to grammar questions would not differ considerably from what are currently most common practices in searching for any kind of information. The answers are, as a rule, simply looked up online. From a group of 189 respondents, among whom the majority were university-educated language professionals such as linguists, editors, journalists and translators, more than half reported that they preferred consulting online rather than printed sources. The respondents below the age of 25 who reported looking up usage advice in printed books were few and far between (11%). The question that can be consequently raised is what implications this finding has for the future of the printed usage advice literature, which includes usage guides, all-in-one reference books we are researching in the context of the Bridging the Unbridgeable...
This chapter focuses on the variation in copy editors' treatment of the prescriptive rule against... more This chapter focuses on the variation in copy editors' treatment of the prescriptive rule against the singular use of data. Data has been reinterpreted as a mass noun in modern English, with the meaning of agglomeration of pieces of information. To test the extent to which this prescriptive rule is still applied, copy editors across the English-speaking world were solicited through an online survey to edit the same fragments of academic writing. The changes with respect to their treatment of data indicate that age, variety, intra-linguistic factors and prescriptive guidelines play a role in shaping the respondents’ copy-editing practices.
This chapter is an exploration of bottom-up, or grassroots, prescriptivism and the shift in the d... more This chapter is an exploration of bottom-up, or grassroots, prescriptivism and the shift in the dynamics of language policing. The notion that language ideologies and norms are tied to and reinforced by formalized authorities-grammarians, language associations, media platforms and the like-has to be questioned in the digital and postdigital age characterized by its participatory culture. This chapter argues that the rise in importance of grassroots prescriptivism is tied to larger shifts in late-modern publics and the making of authority. The first part of this contribution introduces the theoretical foundations of grassroots prescriptivism and it defines its forms and structures as well as the common topics and targets. For a closer look at the phenomenon, a case study is presented on grassroots prescriptivism as observed on the online platform Reddit whose users discuss pronunciation variation of the internet coinage imgur.
Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2015
ABSTRACT The public's concern with the fate of the standard language has been well documented... more ABSTRACT The public's concern with the fate of the standard language has been well documented in the history of the complaint tradition. The print media have for centuries featured letters to the editor on questions of language use. This study examines a corpus of 258 language-related letters to the editor published in the English-speaking print media. By applying keyword and key semantic domain analysis, characteristics of prescriptive language are identified, as well as types of arguments used in prescriptivist discourse. This study aims to provide an insight into the argumentation strategies and points of criticism related to the nonstandard varieties of the English language.
This chapter focuses on the variation in copy editors' treatment of the prescriptive rule... more This chapter focuses on the variation in copy editors' treatment of the prescriptive rule against the singular use of data. Data has been reinterpreted as a mass noun in modern English, with the meaning of agglomeration of pieces of information. To test the extent to which this prescriptive rule is still applied, copy editors across the English-speaking world were solicited through an online survey to edit the same fragments of academic writing. The changes with respect to their treatment of data indicate that age, variety, intra-linguistic factors and prescriptive guidelines play a role in shaping the respondents’ copy-editing practices.
Implicit and Explicit Language Attitudes: Mapping Linguistic Prejudice and Attitude Change in Eng... more Implicit and Explicit Language Attitudes: Mapping Linguistic Prejudice and Attitude Change in England Robert M. McKenzie and Andrew McNeill (2023) New York and London: Routledge, 194 pp.
The pro-eating-disorder community is almost exclusively an online community of individuals who cl... more The pro-eating-disorder community is almost exclusively an online community of individuals who claim that eating disorders are not an illness, but rather a lifestyle choice. This study offers an insight into the ideologies constructed in the pro-eating-disorder online discourse by using micro and macro levels of critical discourse analysis (CDA) on 19 blogs written by the self-declared members of the community. Linguistic analysis of the pro-eating-disorder discourse has been largely under-represented and this study is the first to use a corpus-linguistics approach to CDA in analysing the websites’ content. The results of the analysis show that the pro-eating-disorder community constructs the ideology of eating disorders as a life-style via demedicalised reference to the illness. The study also elaborates on the construction of the negative image of “an outsider” (any person not belonging to the community) as an element of self-determination. By using the corpus linguistic technique...
How word choice matters: An analysis of adjective-noun collocations in a corpus of learner essays... more How word choice matters: An analysis of adjective-noun collocations in a corpus of learner essays Foreign language learners ’ choice of collocations is traditionally considered to be one of the main markers of foreignlanguageness (Korosadowitz-Struzynska 1980: 115), hence relevant in achieving a high degree of compe-tence in the target language. In this study we analyse the Croatian Corpus of English Learner Essays (CELE), which consists of 298 argumentative essays written as part of the state school-leaving exam. The corpus, consisting of over 74k tokens was collected in 10 different counties, and the essays were produced in 2010 and 2011. The learner’s use of adjective-noun collocations is compared against both findings from a native speaker corpus (BNC) and a corpus of learner English (ICLE). Instead of viewing learner usage of colloca-tions as deficient, the claims about the overuse and the underuse of statistical-ly significant collocations are made on the basis of joint findin...
Public debates on language use today have switched platforms from newspaper columns to social med... more Public debates on language use today have switched platforms from newspaper columns to social media, and instead of turning the pages of printed usage guides, English speakers most commonly turn to the internet for usage advice. One of the most successful web-based usage guides, here referred to as usage guides 2.0, is the educational podcast ‘Grammar Girl’s Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing’, which is also available in blog format enabling comments from the audience. This paper presents an analysis of the blog entries and comments from this podcast with a two-fold aim. First, Grammar Girl, as a web-based usage guide, is compared to traditional usage guides available in the HUGE database in order to shed light on potential changes within the usage guide genre that have occurred in the new medium. Second, the analysis of the blog comments attempts to provide a systematic overview of online metalinguistic discussions.
Foreign language learners’ choice of collocations istraditionally considered tobeoneofthemainmark... more Foreign language learners’ choice of collocations istraditionally considered tobeoneofthemainmarkersof foreignlanguageness (Korosadowitz-Struzynska 1980: 115), hence relevant in achieving a high degree of compe-tence in the target language. In this study we analyse the Croatian Corpus ofEnglish Learner Essays (CELE), which consists of 298 argumentative essayswritten as part of the state school-leaving exam. The corpus, consisting ofover 74k tokens was collected in 10 different counties, and the essays wereproducedin2010and2011.Thelearner’suseof adjective-noun collocationsis compared against both findings from a native speaker corpus (BNC) and acorpus of learner English (ICLE). Instead of viewing learner usage of colloca-tions as deficient, the claims about the overuse and the underuse of statisti-cally significant collocations are made on the basis of joint findings from theBNC and the ICLE. This approach demonstrates how native speaker data canbe used for comparison, without being ...
Germany’s recognition of Slovenia and Croatia on December 23, 1991 was the first test of the comm... more Germany’s recognition of Slovenia and Croatia on December 23, 1991 was the first test of the common foreign EC policy, and it is still considered to be one of the likely triggers of the armed conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina to date. This work focuses on the representation of these events in mass print media on a corpus of more than 300 broadsheet newspaper articles published in the US and the UK in the beginning of the 1990s. By combining the methodological approaches of Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and Critical Metaphor Analysis (CMA), this study clarifies the media representations of the new political role Germany asserted in international foreign policy post-unification after decades of being portrayed as an economic giant, but a political dwarf. The linguistic analysis is embedded in historical, political, socio-philosophical media studies and theoretical accounts of discourse analysts on the role of the media in the Habermasian public sphere.
As a result of the Russian military intervention in Ukraine (since 2014), the pro-Kremlin media p... more As a result of the Russian military intervention in Ukraine (since 2014), the pro-Kremlin media propaganda within and outside of Russia’s borders has become highly topical throughout the past year ...
The improper use of the possessive apostrophe has for a long time been a subject of concern among... more The improper use of the possessive apostrophe has for a long time been a subject of concern among the authors of usage guides in English. Apostrophes do not represent any sounds, and since nouns in the genitive, and plural nominative and accusative nouns with few exceptions sound the same, their spelling distinctions are purely grammatical (Bryant et al., 1997: 93). Because the sign exists only in the written language, its usage has been rather unstable ever since it was first introduced to the English language in the sixteenth century to mark dropped letters (Little, 1986: 15−16), and it was not until the eighteenth century when the possessive apostrophe was first introduced (Crystal, 2003: 68). The usage guide database HUGE (Hyper Usage Guide of English), which is built by Robin Straaijer as part of the ‘Bridging the Unbridgeable’ project that Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade wrote about in an earlier issue of English Today, proves that apostrophe ‘misuse’ is the most popular topic i...
When I launched an online survey last December with the aim of learning about people's practi... more When I launched an online survey last December with the aim of learning about people's practices of looking up usage advice, I anticipated that searching for answers to grammar questions would not differ considerably from what are currently most common practices in searching for any kind of information. The answers are, as a rule, simply looked up online. From a group of 189 respondents, among whom the majority were university-educated language professionals such as linguists, editors, journalists and translators, more than half reported that they preferred consulting online rather than printed sources. The respondents below the age of 25 who reported looking up usage advice in printed books were few and far between (11%). The question that can be consequently raised is what implications this finding has for the future of the printed usage advice literature, which includes usage guides, all-in-one reference books we are researching in the context of the Bridging the Unbridgeable...
This chapter focuses on the variation in copy editors' treatment of the prescriptive rule against... more This chapter focuses on the variation in copy editors' treatment of the prescriptive rule against the singular use of data. Data has been reinterpreted as a mass noun in modern English, with the meaning of agglomeration of pieces of information. To test the extent to which this prescriptive rule is still applied, copy editors across the English-speaking world were solicited through an online survey to edit the same fragments of academic writing. The changes with respect to their treatment of data indicate that age, variety, intra-linguistic factors and prescriptive guidelines play a role in shaping the respondents’ copy-editing practices.
This chapter is an exploration of bottom-up, or grassroots, prescriptivism and the shift in the d... more This chapter is an exploration of bottom-up, or grassroots, prescriptivism and the shift in the dynamics of language policing. The notion that language ideologies and norms are tied to and reinforced by formalized authorities-grammarians, language associations, media platforms and the like-has to be questioned in the digital and postdigital age characterized by its participatory culture. This chapter argues that the rise in importance of grassroots prescriptivism is tied to larger shifts in late-modern publics and the making of authority. The first part of this contribution introduces the theoretical foundations of grassroots prescriptivism and it defines its forms and structures as well as the common topics and targets. For a closer look at the phenomenon, a case study is presented on grassroots prescriptivism as observed on the online platform Reddit whose users discuss pronunciation variation of the internet coinage imgur.
Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2015
ABSTRACT The public's concern with the fate of the standard language has been well documented... more ABSTRACT The public's concern with the fate of the standard language has been well documented in the history of the complaint tradition. The print media have for centuries featured letters to the editor on questions of language use. This study examines a corpus of 258 language-related letters to the editor published in the English-speaking print media. By applying keyword and key semantic domain analysis, characteristics of prescriptive language are identified, as well as types of arguments used in prescriptivist discourse. This study aims to provide an insight into the argumentation strategies and points of criticism related to the nonstandard varieties of the English language.
The Discourse on English Usage in the Media
“Less should not be misused for fewer. Less refer... more The Discourse on English Usage in the Media
“Less should not be misused for fewer. Less refers to quantity, fewer to number.” (Strunk 1918, 38)
“Avoid double negatives. They are offences against logic and, if they are an attempt at being funny, they fail. ” (Heffer 2010, 57)
English lacks a central arbiter of language, a single linguistic authority. Nevertheless, as a result of a centuries’ long tradition of grammar, dictionary, usage guide and text book writing, grammar rules, such as the ones cited above, have been widely distributed primarily through educational institutions, but also through popular publications such usage guides in the English-speaking world. These sources constitute the primary force in what are in effect bottom-up standardisation efforts in the English language.
Another form of such standardisation efforts is the practice of formulating public complaints about “bad usage” in different media outlets, which are motivated by the belief among the general public that the language is in a state of decline. An example of such a complaint is this comment from an article published in the online Daily Mail edition on March 13, 2014, which criticises the perceived lack of distinction between the use of me and I,
I would wager that most of the younger population would not know that the grammar was incorrect. It's a pity that all teachers don't have to pass a test for grammar. Again I would think that most of them don't know when to use “me” or “I”.
The topic of linguistic complaints has been addressed by Milroy and Milroy in their account of the English standardisation processes (Milroy and Milroy 2002 [1985]: 24−46). What they call the “complaint tradition” in their view supports and transmits linguistic prescriptivism that dictates how language ought to be used as opposed to the descriptive approach of modern linguistics studying how language is used (cf. Cameron 1995: 3−11; Curzan 2014: 4). In this talk I look into the two opposing sides in the language debate, the one taken by prescriptivists, and the other by descriptive linguistics; I will do so by analysing a self-compiled corpus of linguistic complaints and comparing them with actual language use in large-scale representative corpora (Davies 2010−). Through corpus-based analysis I will attempt to provide answers to the following questions: “How justified are the complaints about the decline in usage and ‘bad English’?” and “In how much do linguistic complaints mirror actual language use?”
References:
Cameron, Deborah (1995). Verbal Hygiene: The Politics of Language. London and New York: Routledge.
Curzan, Anne (2014). Fixing English: Prescriptivism and Language History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Davies, Mark (2010−). The Corpus of Historical American English: 400 million words, 1810−2009. http://corpus.byu.edu/coha/.
Heffer, Simon (2010). Strictly English: The correct way to write... and why it matters. London: Random House.
Milroy, James and Lesley Milroy (2002). Authority in Language: Investigating Standard English [3rd ed.]. London and New York: Routledge.
Strunk, William (1918). The Elements of Style. New York: W.P. Humphrey.
Presentation of the paper Kendall, Tyler (2011). “Corpora from a sociolinguistics perspective.” R... more Presentation of the paper Kendall, Tyler (2011). “Corpora from a sociolinguistics perspective.” Revista Brasileira de Linguística Aplicada 11.2, 361-389.
Public debates on language use today have switched platforms from newspaper columns to blogs and ... more Public debates on language use today have switched platforms from newspaper columns to blogs and forums, and usage guides have changed their shape and form. As Anne Curzan notes in Fixing English (2014), the most influential prescriptive tools nowadays are not usage guides, but rather the red and green squiggly lines of Microsoft’s grammar checker. Studies also indicate that native speakers most commonly turn to the Internet when in doubt about matters of usage (see Ebner forthc. Kostadinova forthc.). In an effort to analyse the different functionalities and advantages of online sources on usage and in order to understand what preferences users have in seeking grammar advice online, I conducted an online survey in April 2014 on the blog created within the project Bridging the Unbridgeable: linguists, prescriptivists and the general public (http://bridgingtheunbridgeable.com/). Respondents were asked to give information on which online sources on language use they regularly consulted. In this paper, I report on the results of the survey which served as a starting point for evaluating online sources that implicitly or explicitly provide guidance on usage. From ‘googling it’, consulting online dictionaries, drawing on language corpora, Wikipedia, language blogs, and add-ons such as Grammarly, I will discuss the benefits and shortcomings of these different resources and evaluate each of them from the perspective of the debate between prescriptive and descriptive approaches to the English language. The online resources provided by the informants are rated on the basis of different criteria, including ease of use, the amount of the provided linguistic context and availability.
Linguists are largely concerned with describing language, whereas authors of usage guides present... more Linguists are largely concerned with describing language, whereas authors of usage guides present norms of correctness to the general public (Beal 2009:35). Bridging the Unbridgeable, a project conducted at Leiden University, investigates the relationship among the three players in the field of prescriptivism, linguists, prescriptivists and the general public, by applying a multi-method approach.
In this talk, I address the linguists’ current attitudes towards prescriptivism, and present the steps taken in creating inventories of usage problems by investigating a single usage problem: the split infinitive.
Two approaches to corpus-based research of prescriptivism will be presented, investigating prescriptivism by examining a database of usage guides, and a database of articles on language usage in Letters-to-the-Editor sections of newspapers written by the general public, commonly referred to as the “complaint tradition” (Milroy and Milroy 1991:37). The Hyper Usage Guide of English, compiled hitherto as part of the Bridging the Unbridgeable project, consists of 60 usage guides, published in the period between 1770 and 2010. This database will provide insight into the diachronic development of usage issues in English, and enable future research on prescriptivism. ProQuest is a historical newspaper database enabling research of usage issues across time, as will be demonstrated on the split infinitive example. Such an overview of the general public’s attitudes towards questions of usage also assists in identifying the origins of stigmatisation of a particular usage item and the groups of people who form the targets of such criticism.
Beal, Joan C. 2009. Three hundred years of prescriptivism (and counting). In Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade and Wim van der Wurff (eds.), Current Issues in Late Modern English. Bern etc.: Peter Lang. 2556.
Milroy, James and Lesley Milroy. 1991. Authority in Language. Investigating Language Prescription and Standardisation [2nd ed.]. London etc.: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Njemačko priznanje Republika Hrvatske i Slovenije 23.12.1991. mnogi analitičari do današnjeg dana... more Njemačko priznanje Republika Hrvatske i Slovenije 23.12.1991. mnogi analitičari do današnjeg dana proglašavaju kontroverznim, unilaterlanim, preuranjenim i mogućim uzrokom početka oružanih sukoba u Bosni i Hercegovini. Nakon ovog događaja mogućnost provođenja zajedničke vanjske politike Europske zajednice postaje upitnom te se u medijima diljem Europe i Sjedinjenih Američkih Država prvi put nakon ujedinjenja Njemačke govori o Njemačkoj koja teži uspostavi “Četvrtog Reicha”. Cilj ovog istraživanja je prepoznavanje ideologija kritičkom analizom diskursa izvještaja britanskog i američkog tiska o njemačkom priznanju Hrvatske i Slovenije. Lingvistička analiza utemeljena je na korpusu koji se sastoji od više od 300 članaka iz 13 najtiražnijih kvalitetnih britanskih i američkih novina objavljenih ranih devedesetih godina prošlog stoljeća. Zbog veličine obrađenog korpusa kvalitativna analiza popraćena je kvantitativnom te su u istraživanju korišteni alati računalne lingvistike (popisi pojavnica, ključne riječi, alati za konkordancije). Ovo istraživanje nije samo primjer mogućnosti interdisciplinarne primjene kritičke analize diskursa u povijesnoj, političkoj i medijskoj analizi, već ono također doprinosi shvaćanju medijskog diskursa koji se pojavio tijekom najznačajnijih povijesnih događanja druge polovine dvadesetog stoljeća: pada komunizma i izmjene karte Europe.
Germany’s recognition of Slovenia and Croatia on December 23, 1991 was the first test of the comm... more Germany’s recognition of Slovenia and Croatia on December 23, 1991 was the first test of the common foreign EC policy, and it is still considered to be one of the likely triggers of the armed conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina to date. This work focuses on the representation of these events in mass print media on a corpus of more than 300 broadsheet newspaper articles published in the US and the UK in the beginning of the 1990s. By combining the methodological approaches of Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and Critical Metaphor Analysis (CMA), this study clarifies the media representations of the new political role Germany asserted in international foreign policy post-unification after decades of being portrayed as an economic giant, but a political dwarf. The linguistic analysis is embedded in historical, political, socio-philosophical media studies and theoretical accounts of discourse analysts on the role of the media in the Habermasian public sphere.
The general public’s discussions about the questions of the ‘correct’ use of the English language... more The general public’s discussions about the questions of the ‘correct’ use of the English language have been traditionally reflected in the letters-to-the-editor sections of newspapers. These public complaints about ‘misused’ apostrophes, double negatives, and preposition stranding constitute well-kept records of the public’s attitudes on linguistic matters (McManus 2008:1). In the last two decades such debates have also appeared on numerous web platforms, on for a, and in comment sections of weblogs. Until now there have been only a small number of studies on the discourse of linguistic prescriptivism in the traditional media (McManus 2008, Percy 2009), while the number of studies on such discourse online has been even scarcer (Schaffer 2010).
In this paper I present an analysis of the Wikipedia talk pages that are secondary to the Wikipedia articles which focus on English usage items, such as Disputes in English grammar, Serial comma, Split infinitive, etc., as an as yet unexplored medium in the analysis of prescriptivism. Wikipedia talk pages separate the Wikipedia entries from discussions on what information should or should not be included on the main pages (Viégas, Wattenberg and Dave 2004:576). They serve a number of functions in managing articles: strategic planning of editing, enforcement of Wikipedia policies, and conducting guidelines (Viégas et al. 2007). Furthermore, talk pages have a central role in obtaining the quality of Wikipedia articles. They differ greatly from print sources on the subject, as they enable wide participation and as there are no editorial restrictions on who contributes to the discussion. What differentiates them from other types of online discussion boards are their participants’ orientation toward a common goal of creating a Wikipedia article on the one hand, and the social norms governing the Wikipedia community on the other (Emigh and Herring 2005). This paper explores the processes of negotiation among Wikipedians and the use of argumentation strategies involved in finding solutions to the perceived linguistic problems.
Emigh, William and Susan C. Herring (2005). Collaborative authoring on the web: a genre analysis of online encyclopedias. Proceedings of the 38th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. http://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings/hicss/2005/2268/04/22680099a.pdf McManus, Jennifer (2008). Present-day prescriptivist discourse: a transitivity analysis. Paper for workshop “Normative Linguistics”, ISLE 1, Freiburg.
Percy, Carol (2009). Periodical reviews and the rise of prescriptivism: The Monthly (1749-1844) and Critical Review (1756-1817) in the 18th century. In Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade and Wim van der Wurff (eds.), Current Issues and Late Modern English. Bern: Peter Lang. 117-50.
Viégas, Fernanda B., Wattenberg, Martin and Kushal Dave (2004). Studying cooperation and conflict between authors with history flow visualisations. Proceedings of SIGCHI. Vienna: ACM Press. 575-582.
Viégas, Fernanda B., Wattenberg, Martin, Kriss, Jesse, and Frank van Ham (2007). Talk before you type: Coordination in Wikipedia. Proceedings of the 40th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. http://hint.fm/papers/wikipedia_coordination_final.pdf Schaffer, Deborah (2010). Old whine online: prescriptive grammar blogs on the Internet. English Today 26.4. 23-28.
Shakespeare wrote ‘Between You and I’: Changing perspectives on authority and language use
Th... more Shakespeare wrote ‘Between You and I’: Changing perspectives on authority and language use
The public’s concern with the fate of the standard language has been well documented in the history of “the complaint tradition” (cf. Milroy and Milroy 2002:Ch.2). From the eighteenth century onwards (Percy 2009), the print media have featured letters to the editor on questions of language use, such as double negation, the split infinitive, dangling participles, etc. Although topics regarding language use keep recurring in the complaint tradition, the authors’ argumentation strategies change gradually. Opinions about what makes a certain usage item acceptable or unacceptable are usually supported by authorities, be it renowned authors, such as Shakespeare, grammar books, usage guides, or media houses (BBC). In this paper I address the question of who is seen as the linguistic authority in a diachronic corpus of language-related letters to the editor.
The results of my analysis indicate that a shift occurred during the last century. Whereas in the first half of the twentieth century the authors of letters to the editor often refer to individuals, language professionals, as authority figures, the analysis of the later letters shows that in recent times it is institutions (dictionaries, the media) that are viewed as sources of authority on matters of usage instead. I intend to demonstrate that with the introduction of numerous web platforms offering language advice (Grammar Girl, Language Log), the question of who constitutes an authority on usage is currently shifting entirely, and that solutions to perceived usage problems are instead often negotiated by many participants in the discourse, experts and lay people alike.
Keywords: linguistic prescriptivism, complaint tradition, linguistic authority, corpus-based analysis
References:
Milroy, James and Lesley Milroy. 2002. Authority in Language [3rd ed.]. London and New York: Routledge.
Percy, Carol. 2009. Periodical reviews and the rise of prescriptivism: The Monthly (1749-1844) and Critical Review (1756-1817) in the 18th century. In Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade and Wim van der Wurff (eds.), Current Issues in Late Modern English. Bern: Peter Lang. 117-50.
Traditionally not associated with journalism, blogging has been steadily gaining ground in news c... more Traditionally not associated with journalism, blogging has been steadily gaining ground in news corporations since the early 2000s. The British Broadcasting Corporation, commonly known as the BBC, is no exception (Hermida 2009). However, new media, especially blogging, entails new, often under-researched, language conventions. Some of the BBC’s audience have expressed fears concerning loosening standards which would probably have dramatic consequences for the BBC’s role as a language authority (Luscombe 2009). Even though the BBC emphasizes its own style and language guidelines in its style guides, similar conventions seem not to exist for its online blogs. The existing guidelines for BBC News online, which focus mainly on contents and language output, do not target the BBC’s blogging activities, however, bloggers are instructed to write in a personal and less formal manner (Hermida 2009). Nevertheless, the BBC’s audience is often alert when it comes to its language use as is stated by John Allen, author of the 2003 BBC News Styleguide: “Our use, or perceived misuse, of English produces a greater response from our audiences than anything else. It is in nobody’s interest to confuse, annoy, dismay, alienate or exasperate them” (Allen 2003: 7).
In this study we investigate the linguistic usage in two online BBC sources, The Editors’ blog and the BBC News online, with a focus on disputed usage as listed in the BBC style guide. The disputed features include among others Americanisms, modifying absolute adjectives (e.g. unique), dangling participles, and split infinitives. We analyse in how far language usage in blog posts differs from the prescribed BBC stylistic guidelines which are more likely to be reflected in reports on BBC News online. By focusing on these specific usage items we hope to contribute to an understanding of the possible tensions in this developing journalistic genre.
"Višnja Pavičić Takač
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Osijek
Morana Lukač
Leiden U... more "Višnja Pavičić Takač
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Osijek
Morana Lukač
Leiden University Centre for Linguistics
A corpus-based approach to exploring EFL learners'
collocational competence
Collocational competence, defined as a ready and quick access to a phrasal mental lexicon, is thought to be an important component of language competence. Learning collocations, however, presents one of the greatest problems for EFL learners. Previous studies (cf. Channell, 1981; Bahns & Eldaw, 1993; Farghal & Obiedat, 1995; Gitsaki, 1996; Hsu, 2010) have shown that erroneous use of collocations constitutes a large portion of all errors in EFL learners’ production, and that it is one of the strongest markers of foreignlanguageness (cf. Korosadowicz-Struzynska, 1980).
The present study explores collocations produced by EFL learners in the essays written as part of the English state-school leaving exam. The aim of the study is to conduct corpus-based analysis of the Croatian EFL learners’ usage of adjective + noun collocations and to compare the observed patterns with native speaker usage. The learner corpus consists of 299 essays (74 245 tokens) collected in ten different Croatian counties. The corpus is described in terms of its lexical density (TTR) and lexical variety by comparing the word frequency list with the Oxford 3000 keywords. Additionally, the study aims at analysing errors in EFL learners’ use of collocations. The criteria for classifying adjective + noun collocations as deviant includes both Contrastive Interlanguage Analysis (CIS) and the standard usage described in various dictionary entries. Respectively, each identified collocation is compared with the frequency of the native speaker usage in the British National Corpus (BNC); the collocations classified as restricted are additionally compared with dictionary entries. The results of the analysis address the features of non-nativeness in learner usage of a collocational pattern, point to the possible sources of deviant usage, and contrast the acceptability of learner usage when compared to both naturally occurring language data and the more selective dictionary entries.
References
Bahns,J. and Eldaw, M.(1993). Should we teach EFL students collocation?System, 21, 1, 101-114.
Channell, J. (1981) Applying semantic theory into vocabulary teaching .ELT Journal, 35, 1, 115-122.
Farghal,N., and Obiedat, H. (1995) . collocations : a neglected variable in EFL.IRAL. 33(4), 315-333.
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The pro-eating-disorder community is almost exclusively an online community of individuals who c... more The pro-eating-disorder community is almost exclusively an online community of individuals who claim that eating disorders are not an illness, but rather a life-style choice. This study offers an insight into the ideologies constructed in the pro-eating-disorder online discourse by using micro and macro levels of critical discourse analysis (CDA) on 19 blogs written by the self-declared members of the community. Linguistic analysis of the pro-eating-disorder discourse has been largely under-represented and this study is the first to use a corpus-linguistics approach to CDA in analysing the websites' content. The results of the analysis show that the pro-eating-disorder community constructs the ideology of eating disorders as a life-style via demedicalised reference to the illness. The study also elaborates on the construction of the negative image of an outsider as an element of self-determination. By using the corpus linguistic technique of keyness, main topics of the discourse are identified, suggesting relevant relations between the discourse of measuring and will power and the underlying pro-eating-disorder ideologies.
The research presented in this paper deals with the written skills of a group of thirty Croatian ... more The research presented in this paper deals with the written skills of a group of thirty Croatian secondary school students in terms of their use of the Present Perfect. In the theoretical part of this paper the context of English teaching in Croatia is portrayed, followed by the explanation of the special case of the Present Perfect in teaching, learning and conceptualizing. The results of the analysis of the use of the Present Perfect in guided written essays showed certain recurring patterns in the incorrect use such as the improper use of the -en form, wrong use of the auxiliary verb and the use of the Past Simple instead of the Present Perfect. The recurring mistakes and the problems which arise in learning Present Perfect due to its aspectual nature should be taken into consideration when presenting this grammatical form.
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Papers by Morana Lukač
“Less should not be misused for fewer. Less refers to quantity, fewer to number.” (Strunk 1918, 38)
“Avoid double negatives. They are offences against logic and, if they are an attempt at being funny, they fail. ” (Heffer 2010, 57)
English lacks a central arbiter of language, a single linguistic authority. Nevertheless, as a result of a centuries’ long tradition of grammar, dictionary, usage guide and text book writing, grammar rules, such as the ones cited above, have been widely distributed primarily through educational institutions, but also through popular publications such usage guides in the English-speaking world. These sources constitute the primary force in what are in effect bottom-up standardisation efforts in the English language.
Another form of such standardisation efforts is the practice of formulating public complaints about “bad usage” in different media outlets, which are motivated by the belief among the general public that the language is in a state of decline. An example of such a complaint is this comment from an article published in the online Daily Mail edition on March 13, 2014, which criticises the perceived lack of distinction between the use of me and I,
I would wager that most of the younger population would not know that the grammar was incorrect. It's a pity that all teachers don't have to pass a test for grammar. Again I would think that most of them don't know when to use “me” or “I”.
The topic of linguistic complaints has been addressed by Milroy and Milroy in their account of the English standardisation processes (Milroy and Milroy 2002 [1985]: 24−46). What they call the “complaint tradition” in their view supports and transmits linguistic prescriptivism that dictates how language ought to be used as opposed to the descriptive approach of modern linguistics studying how language is used (cf. Cameron 1995: 3−11; Curzan 2014: 4). In this talk I look into the two opposing sides in the language debate, the one taken by prescriptivists, and the other by descriptive linguistics; I will do so by analysing a self-compiled corpus of linguistic complaints and comparing them with actual language use in large-scale representative corpora (Davies 2010−). Through corpus-based analysis I will attempt to provide answers to the following questions: “How justified are the complaints about the decline in usage and ‘bad English’?” and “In how much do linguistic complaints mirror actual language use?”
References:
Cameron, Deborah (1995). Verbal Hygiene: The Politics of Language. London and New York: Routledge.
Curzan, Anne (2014). Fixing English: Prescriptivism and Language History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Davies, Mark (2010−). The Corpus of Historical American English: 400 million words, 1810−2009. http://corpus.byu.edu/coha/.
Heffer, Simon (2010). Strictly English: The correct way to write... and why it matters. London: Random House.
Milroy, James and Lesley Milroy (2002). Authority in Language: Investigating Standard English [3rd ed.]. London and New York: Routledge.
Strunk, William (1918). The Elements of Style. New York: W.P. Humphrey.
In an effort to analyse the different functionalities and advantages of online sources on usage and in order to understand what preferences users have in seeking grammar advice online, I conducted an online survey in April 2014 on the blog created within the project Bridging the Unbridgeable: linguists, prescriptivists and the general public (http://bridgingtheunbridgeable.com/). Respondents were asked to give information on which online sources on language use they regularly consulted. In this paper, I report on the results of the survey which served as a starting point for evaluating online sources that implicitly or explicitly provide guidance on usage. From ‘googling it’, consulting online dictionaries, drawing on language corpora, Wikipedia, language blogs, and add-ons such as Grammarly, I will discuss the benefits and shortcomings of these different resources and evaluate each of them from the perspective of the debate between prescriptive and descriptive approaches to the English language. The online resources provided by the informants are rated on the basis of different criteria, including ease of use, the amount of the provided linguistic context and availability.
In this talk, I address the linguists’ current attitudes towards prescriptivism, and present the steps taken in creating inventories of usage problems by investigating a single usage problem: the split infinitive.
Two approaches to corpus-based research of prescriptivism will be presented, investigating prescriptivism by examining a database of usage guides, and a database of articles on language usage in Letters-to-the-Editor sections of newspapers written by the general public, commonly referred to as the “complaint tradition” (Milroy and Milroy 1991:37). The Hyper Usage Guide of English, compiled hitherto as part of the Bridging the Unbridgeable project, consists of 60 usage guides, published in the period between 1770 and 2010. This database will provide insight into the diachronic development of usage issues in English, and enable future research on prescriptivism. ProQuest is a historical newspaper database enabling research of usage issues across time, as will be demonstrated on the split infinitive example. Such an overview of the general public’s attitudes towards questions of usage also assists in identifying the origins of stigmatisation of a particular usage item and the groups of people who form the targets of such criticism.
Beal, Joan C. 2009. Three hundred years of prescriptivism (and counting). In Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade and Wim van der Wurff (eds.), Current Issues in Late Modern English. Bern etc.: Peter Lang. 2556.
Milroy, James and Lesley Milroy. 1991. Authority in Language. Investigating Language Prescription and Standardisation [2nd ed.]. London etc.: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Cilj ovog istraživanja je prepoznavanje ideologija kritičkom analizom diskursa izvještaja britanskog i američkog tiska o njemačkom priznanju Hrvatske i Slovenije. Lingvistička analiza utemeljena je na korpusu koji se sastoji od više od 300 članaka iz 13 najtiražnijih kvalitetnih britanskih i američkih novina objavljenih ranih devedesetih godina prošlog stoljeća. Zbog veličine obrađenog korpusa kvalitativna analiza popraćena je kvantitativnom te su u istraživanju korišteni alati računalne lingvistike (popisi pojavnica, ključne riječi, alati za konkordancije).
Ovo istraživanje nije samo primjer mogućnosti interdisciplinarne primjene kritičke analize diskursa u povijesnoj, političkoj i medijskoj analizi, već ono također doprinosi shvaćanju medijskog diskursa koji se pojavio tijekom najznačajnijih povijesnih događanja druge polovine dvadesetog stoljeća: pada komunizma i izmjene karte Europe.
In this paper I present an analysis of the Wikipedia talk pages that are secondary to the Wikipedia articles which focus on English usage items, such as Disputes in English grammar, Serial comma, Split infinitive, etc., as an as yet unexplored medium in the analysis of prescriptivism. Wikipedia talk pages separate the Wikipedia entries from discussions on what information should or should not be included on the main pages (Viégas, Wattenberg and Dave 2004:576). They serve a number of functions in managing articles: strategic planning of editing, enforcement of Wikipedia policies, and conducting guidelines (Viégas et al. 2007). Furthermore, talk pages have a central role in obtaining the quality of Wikipedia articles. They differ greatly from print sources on the subject, as they enable wide participation and as there are no editorial restrictions on who contributes to the discussion. What differentiates them from other types of online discussion boards are their participants’ orientation toward a common goal of creating a Wikipedia article on the one hand, and the social norms governing the Wikipedia community on the other (Emigh and Herring 2005). This paper explores the processes of negotiation among Wikipedians and the use of argumentation strategies involved in finding solutions to the perceived linguistic problems.
Emigh, William and Susan C. Herring (2005). Collaborative authoring on the web: a genre analysis of online encyclopedias. Proceedings of the 38th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. http://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings/hicss/2005/2268/04/22680099a.pdf
McManus, Jennifer (2008). Present-day prescriptivist discourse: a transitivity analysis. Paper for workshop “Normative Linguistics”, ISLE 1, Freiburg.
Percy, Carol (2009). Periodical reviews and the rise of prescriptivism: The Monthly (1749-1844) and Critical Review (1756-1817) in the 18th century. In Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade and Wim van der Wurff (eds.), Current Issues and Late Modern English. Bern: Peter Lang. 117-50.
Viégas, Fernanda B., Wattenberg, Martin and Kushal Dave (2004). Studying cooperation and conflict between authors with history flow visualisations. Proceedings of SIGCHI. Vienna: ACM Press. 575-582.
Viégas, Fernanda B., Wattenberg, Martin, Kriss, Jesse, and Frank van Ham (2007). Talk before you type: Coordination in Wikipedia. Proceedings of the 40th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. http://hint.fm/papers/wikipedia_coordination_final.pdf
Schaffer, Deborah (2010). Old whine online: prescriptive grammar blogs on the Internet. English Today 26.4. 23-28.
The public’s concern with the fate of the standard language has been well documented in the history of “the complaint tradition” (cf. Milroy and Milroy 2002:Ch.2). From the eighteenth century onwards (Percy 2009), the print media have featured letters to the editor on questions of language use, such as double negation, the split infinitive, dangling participles, etc. Although topics regarding language use keep recurring in the complaint tradition, the authors’ argumentation strategies change gradually. Opinions about what makes a certain usage item acceptable or unacceptable are usually supported by authorities, be it renowned authors, such as Shakespeare, grammar books, usage guides, or media houses (BBC). In this paper I address the question of who is seen as the linguistic authority in a diachronic corpus of language-related letters to the editor.
The results of my analysis indicate that a shift occurred during the last century. Whereas in the first half of the twentieth century the authors of letters to the editor often refer to individuals, language professionals, as authority figures, the analysis of the later letters shows that in recent times it is institutions (dictionaries, the media) that are viewed as sources of authority on matters of usage instead. I intend to demonstrate that with the introduction of numerous web platforms offering language advice (Grammar Girl, Language Log), the question of who constitutes an authority on usage is currently shifting entirely, and that solutions to perceived usage problems are instead often negotiated by many participants in the discourse, experts and lay people alike.
Keywords: linguistic prescriptivism, complaint tradition, linguistic authority, corpus-based analysis
References:
Milroy, James and Lesley Milroy. 2002. Authority in Language [3rd ed.]. London and New York: Routledge.
Percy, Carol. 2009. Periodical reviews and the rise of prescriptivism: The Monthly (1749-1844) and Critical Review (1756-1817) in the 18th century. In Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade and Wim van der Wurff (eds.), Current Issues in Late Modern English. Bern: Peter Lang. 117-50.
In this study we investigate the linguistic usage in two online BBC sources, The Editors’ blog and the BBC News online, with a focus on disputed usage as listed in the BBC style guide. The disputed features include among others Americanisms, modifying absolute adjectives (e.g. unique), dangling participles, and split infinitives. We analyse in how far language usage in blog posts differs from the prescribed BBC stylistic guidelines which are more likely to be reflected in reports on BBC News online. By focusing on these specific usage items we hope to contribute to an understanding of the possible tensions in this developing journalistic genre.
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Osijek
Morana Lukač
Leiden University Centre for Linguistics
A corpus-based approach to exploring EFL learners'
collocational competence
Collocational competence, defined as a ready and quick access to a phrasal mental lexicon, is thought to be an important component of language competence. Learning collocations, however, presents one of the greatest problems for EFL learners. Previous studies (cf. Channell, 1981; Bahns & Eldaw, 1993; Farghal & Obiedat, 1995; Gitsaki, 1996; Hsu, 2010) have shown that erroneous use of collocations constitutes a large portion of all errors in EFL learners’ production, and that it is one of the strongest markers of foreignlanguageness (cf. Korosadowicz-Struzynska, 1980).
The present study explores collocations produced by EFL learners in the essays written as part of the English state-school leaving exam. The aim of the study is to conduct corpus-based analysis of the Croatian EFL learners’ usage of adjective + noun collocations and to compare the observed patterns with native speaker usage. The learner corpus consists of 299 essays (74 245 tokens) collected in ten different Croatian counties. The corpus is described in terms of its lexical density (TTR) and lexical variety by comparing the word frequency list with the Oxford 3000 keywords. Additionally, the study aims at analysing errors in EFL learners’ use of collocations. The criteria for classifying adjective + noun collocations as deviant includes both Contrastive Interlanguage Analysis (CIS) and the standard usage described in various dictionary entries. Respectively, each identified collocation is compared with the frequency of the native speaker usage in the British National Corpus (BNC); the collocations classified as restricted are additionally compared with dictionary entries. The results of the analysis address the features of non-nativeness in learner usage of a collocational pattern, point to the possible sources of deviant usage, and contrast the acceptability of learner usage when compared to both naturally occurring language data and the more selective dictionary entries.
References
Bahns,J. and Eldaw, M.(1993). Should we teach EFL students collocation?System, 21, 1, 101-114.
Channell, J. (1981) Applying semantic theory into vocabulary teaching .ELT Journal, 35, 1, 115-122.
Farghal,N., and Obiedat, H. (1995) . collocations : a neglected variable in EFL.IRAL. 33(4), 315-333.
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