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Hyland, Ken; Zou, Hang – Applied Linguistics, 2022
Academic communication crucially involves readers, or hearers, buying into an argument. The audience has to be hooked, involved and led to a desired conclusion, and this is perhaps no more urgent than in a Three Minute Thesis presentation (3MT). In this competitive environment, doctoral students present their research using only one static slide…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Theses, Academic Language, Audience Awareness
Hyland, Ken; Jiang, Feng – Applied Linguistics, 2019
In this article we explore the ways in which academic citation practices have changed over the past 50 years. Based on the analysis of a corpus of 2.2 million words from the same leading journals in four disciplines in 1965, 1985, and 2015, we document a substantial rise in citations over the period, particularly in applied linguistics and…
Descriptors: Citations (References), Computational Linguistics, Preferences, Verbs
Hyland, Ken; Jiang, Feng – Written Communication, 2016
Successful research writers construct texts by taking a novel point of view toward the issues they discuss while anticipating readers' imagined reactions to those views. This intersubjective positioning is encompassed by the term stance and, in various guises, has been a topic of interest to researchers of written communication and applied…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Written Language, Applied Linguistics, Academic Discourse
Hyland, Ken – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2010
The view of academic discourse as a rhetorical activity involving interactions between writers and readers is now central to most perspectives on EAP, but these interactions are conducted differently in different disciplinary and generic contexts. In this paper I use the term "proximity" to refer to a writer's control of those rhetorical features…
Descriptors: Proximity, Academic Discourse, Research Papers (Students), Writing Processes
Hyland, Ken – English for Specific Purposes, 2008
Despite his considerable influence on the development of ESP and all our professional lives, almost nothing has been written about John Swales' distinctive prose style. Based on a 340,000 word corpus comprising 14 single-authored papers and most chapters from his three main books, this paper sets out to identify the main features of this style.…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Writing (Composition), English for Special Purposes
Hyland, Ken – Applied Linguistics, 2007
A great deal of research has now established that written texts embody interactions between writers and readers, but few studies have examined the ways that small acts of reformulation and exemplification help contribute to this. Abstraction, theorisation and interpretation need to be woven into a text which makes sense to a particular community…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Applied Linguistics, Rhetoric, Language Processing
Hyland, Ken – English for Specific Purposes, 2008
An important component of fluent linguistic production is control of the multi-word expressions referred to as clusters, chunks or bundles. These are extended collocations which appear more frequently than expected by chance, helping to shape meanings in specific contexts and contributing to our sense of coherence in a text. Bundles have begun to…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Intellectual Disciplines, Masters Theses, Doctoral Dissertations
Hyland, Ken; Tse, Polly – TESOL Quarterly: A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect, 2007
This article considers the notion of "academic vocabulary": the assumption that students of English for academic purposes (EAP) should study a core of high frequency words because they are common in an English academic register. We examine the value of the term by using Cox-head's (2000) Academic Word List (AWL) to explore the distribution of its…
Descriptors: Word Lists, English for Academic Purposes, Academic Discourse, Vocabulary

Hyland, Ken – Applied Linguistics, 2002
Explores the use of directives through an analysis of a 2.5 million word corpus of published articles, textbooks, and second language student essays, and through interviews with insider informants on their perceptions and practices. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, College Students, Computational Linguistics, Essays
Hyland, Ken – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2004
Metadiscourse is self-reflective linguistic expressions referring to the evolving text, to the writer, and to the imagined readers of that text. It is based on a view of writing as a social engagement and, in academic contexts, reveals the ways writers project themselves into their discourse to signal their attitudes and commitments. In this…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, Writing Processes, Academic Discourse, Graduate Students