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Degani, Marta; Onysko, Alexander – World Englishes, 2010
This study investigates hybrid compound formation of Maori and English terms in present day New Zealand English (NZE). On the background of Maori and English language contact, the phenomenon of hybrid compounding emerges as a process that, on the one hand, symbolizes the vitality of the Maori element in NZE and, on the other hand, marks the…
Descriptors: Language Variation, Language Research, Linguistic Borrowing, Semantics
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Baker, Wendy; Eggington, William G. – World Englishes, 1999
Using Biber's multidimensional analysis (1998) to examine a large corpus of world English literatures written in Indian, West African, British, Anglo-American, and Mexican-American varieties of English, examines whether quantitative analyses can also be insightful and useful in the examination of world Englishes literatures in expanding…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Creativity, Databases, English (Second Language)
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Mindt, Dieter; Weber, Christel – World Englishes, 1989
Compares the distribution of prepositions in American and British English. Two machine-readable one million word Corpora, the Brown Corpus of American English and the Lob Corpus of British are used as a basis of comparison. (Author/OD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, English, Language Research, Language Variation
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Baker, Wendy – World Englishes, 2001
Using Biber's multidimensional analysis (1988) to examine a large corpus of world English literatures written in Indian, West African, Britain, Anglo-American, and Mexican American varieties of English, examines whether quantitative analyses can also be insightful and useful in the examination of the influence of gender on language and in…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Computational Linguistics, Creativity, English (Second Language)
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Merkestein, Aria – World Englishes, 1998
Argues that instruments normally applied to the analysis of discourse, and that originate in the Western tradition of analyzing language, must be used with extreme caution in analyzing new varieties of English. To substantiate this claim, the article uses as an example the recent work on the emergence of Batswana English. (Author/JL)
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, English (Second Language)