Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 103
pro vyhledávání: '"Jesse Egbert"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Linguistics and Language Teaching, Vol 13, Iss 2, Pp 149-177 (2022)
Building on previous research, this study explored differences in university professors’ perceptions about writing from the beginning to the end of the baccalaureate experience across five common disciplines including biology, business, computer sc
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/cef36a74fb104ff8ac68acac0966dcd4
Autor:
Douglas Biber, Jesse Egbert
While other books focus on special internet registers, like tweets or texting, no previous study describes the full range of everyday registers found on the searchable web. These are the documents that readers encounter every time they do a Google se
Publikováno v:
English for Specific Purposes. 71:161-177
Autor:
Jesse Egbert, Douglas Biber
Publikováno v:
Corpora. 18:121-133
To date, corpus-based methods for comparing language varieties have fallen into one of two camps: ( 1) md analysis – a complicated multi-variate approach based on analysis of functionally motivated linguistic features in each text of a corpus, or (
Publikováno v:
Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory. 19:1-5
Autor:
Elizabeth Hanks, Jesse Egbert
Publikováno v:
Corpus Pragmatics. 6:261-290
Autor:
Jesse Egbert, Marianna Gracheva
Publikováno v:
Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory. 19:115-143
Register studies have focused on accounting for linguistic variation between culturally recognized register categories. This comparative approach to register has consistently demonstrated that culturally recognized register categories can predict lan
Autor:
Brent Burch, Jesse Egbert
Publikováno v:
Journal of Quantitative Linguistics. 30:104-124
Publikováno v:
Applied Linguistics. 44:46-71
Grammatical complexity has been established as a key indicator of language and writing development (Ortega 2003; Bulté and Housen, 2014; Crossley and McNamara 2014). The present study uses the Register-Functional approach to complexity (Biber et al.
Autor:
Jesse Egbert, Brent Burch
Publikováno v:
Applied Linguistics. 44:103-126
The words in a language or language variety are often rank ordered in lists that are meant to reflect the relative importance of those words to language users and learners of a language. This rank ordering is done on the basis of the relative prevale