Investigating a Corpus of Historical Oral Testimonies
portes grátis
Investigating a Corpus of Historical Oral Testimonies
The Linguistic Construction of Certainty
Fitzgerald, Chris
Taylor & Francis Ltd
12/2022
160
Mole
Inglês
9781032224770
15 a 20 dias
317
Descrição não disponível.
Acknowledgements
Chapter One: Oral History and Corpus Linguistics
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Selecting an archive
1.3 Corpus linguistics, historical texts and oral history
1.4 The oral history interview
1.5 Studies of orality in historical texts
1.6 Structure of the book
Chapter Two: The Bureau of Military History: themes and characteristics
2.1 The creation of the Bureau of Military History
2.2 The question of reliability
2.3 Memory
2.4 The language of the Bureau of Military History archive
2.5 Autobiography and military discourse
2.6 Speaking of spokenness
2.7 Transcription
Chapter Three: Constructing the corpus of Irish historical narratives
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Representativeness and corpus size
3.3 Text selection
3.4 Data processing
3.5 Conclusion
Chapter Four: General characteristics of the corpus of Irish historical narratives
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Investigating spokenness
4.3 Characteristics of COIHN: single-word items
4.4 Characteristics of COIHN: multi-word units
4.5 Conclusion
Chapter Five: Commitment to truth: mental process verbs
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Truth
5.3 Hedging and commitment to truth
5.4 Epistemic modality and evidentiality
5.5 Mental process verbs and commitment to truth
5.6 Conclusion
Chapter Six: Commitment to truth: expectation markers
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Adverbs of certainty and actuality
6.3 Conclusion
Chapter Seven: Bringing together corpus linguistics and oral history
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Corpus linguistics and oral history archives
7.3 Considering context
7.4 Final reflection
Appendices
Index
Chapter One: Oral History and Corpus Linguistics
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Selecting an archive
1.3 Corpus linguistics, historical texts and oral history
1.4 The oral history interview
1.5 Studies of orality in historical texts
1.6 Structure of the book
Chapter Two: The Bureau of Military History: themes and characteristics
2.1 The creation of the Bureau of Military History
2.2 The question of reliability
2.3 Memory
2.4 The language of the Bureau of Military History archive
2.5 Autobiography and military discourse
2.6 Speaking of spokenness
2.7 Transcription
Chapter Three: Constructing the corpus of Irish historical narratives
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Representativeness and corpus size
3.3 Text selection
3.4 Data processing
3.5 Conclusion
Chapter Four: General characteristics of the corpus of Irish historical narratives
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Investigating spokenness
4.3 Characteristics of COIHN: single-word items
4.4 Characteristics of COIHN: multi-word units
4.5 Conclusion
Chapter Five: Commitment to truth: mental process verbs
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Truth
5.3 Hedging and commitment to truth
5.4 Epistemic modality and evidentiality
5.5 Mental process verbs and commitment to truth
5.6 Conclusion
Chapter Six: Commitment to truth: expectation markers
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Adverbs of certainty and actuality
6.3 Conclusion
Chapter Seven: Bringing together corpus linguistics and oral history
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Corpus linguistics and oral history archives
7.3 Considering context
7.4 Final reflection
Appendices
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Oral History;Epistemic Modality;Oral History Archive;Expectation Markers;FLC;Corpus Tools;National Library;Cl;Linguistics Researchers;Mental Process Verbs;BNC;Oral History Documents;Black English;Black English Vernacular;UK Parliamentary Debate;Oral History Interview;Reference Corpora;Hibernian Bank;Modal Expressions;Frequent Items;Oral History Testimonies;Oral History Projects;Cambridge International Corpus;VFW;Corpus Size
Acknowledgements
Chapter One: Oral History and Corpus Linguistics
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Selecting an archive
1.3 Corpus linguistics, historical texts and oral history
1.4 The oral history interview
1.5 Studies of orality in historical texts
1.6 Structure of the book
Chapter Two: The Bureau of Military History: themes and characteristics
2.1 The creation of the Bureau of Military History
2.2 The question of reliability
2.3 Memory
2.4 The language of the Bureau of Military History archive
2.5 Autobiography and military discourse
2.6 Speaking of spokenness
2.7 Transcription
Chapter Three: Constructing the corpus of Irish historical narratives
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Representativeness and corpus size
3.3 Text selection
3.4 Data processing
3.5 Conclusion
Chapter Four: General characteristics of the corpus of Irish historical narratives
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Investigating spokenness
4.3 Characteristics of COIHN: single-word items
4.4 Characteristics of COIHN: multi-word units
4.5 Conclusion
Chapter Five: Commitment to truth: mental process verbs
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Truth
5.3 Hedging and commitment to truth
5.4 Epistemic modality and evidentiality
5.5 Mental process verbs and commitment to truth
5.6 Conclusion
Chapter Six: Commitment to truth: expectation markers
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Adverbs of certainty and actuality
6.3 Conclusion
Chapter Seven: Bringing together corpus linguistics and oral history
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Corpus linguistics and oral history archives
7.3 Considering context
7.4 Final reflection
Appendices
Index
Chapter One: Oral History and Corpus Linguistics
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Selecting an archive
1.3 Corpus linguistics, historical texts and oral history
1.4 The oral history interview
1.5 Studies of orality in historical texts
1.6 Structure of the book
Chapter Two: The Bureau of Military History: themes and characteristics
2.1 The creation of the Bureau of Military History
2.2 The question of reliability
2.3 Memory
2.4 The language of the Bureau of Military History archive
2.5 Autobiography and military discourse
2.6 Speaking of spokenness
2.7 Transcription
Chapter Three: Constructing the corpus of Irish historical narratives
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Representativeness and corpus size
3.3 Text selection
3.4 Data processing
3.5 Conclusion
Chapter Four: General characteristics of the corpus of Irish historical narratives
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Investigating spokenness
4.3 Characteristics of COIHN: single-word items
4.4 Characteristics of COIHN: multi-word units
4.5 Conclusion
Chapter Five: Commitment to truth: mental process verbs
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Truth
5.3 Hedging and commitment to truth
5.4 Epistemic modality and evidentiality
5.5 Mental process verbs and commitment to truth
5.6 Conclusion
Chapter Six: Commitment to truth: expectation markers
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Adverbs of certainty and actuality
6.3 Conclusion
Chapter Seven: Bringing together corpus linguistics and oral history
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Corpus linguistics and oral history archives
7.3 Considering context
7.4 Final reflection
Appendices
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Oral History;Epistemic Modality;Oral History Archive;Expectation Markers;FLC;Corpus Tools;National Library;Cl;Linguistics Researchers;Mental Process Verbs;BNC;Oral History Documents;Black English;Black English Vernacular;UK Parliamentary Debate;Oral History Interview;Reference Corpora;Hibernian Bank;Modal Expressions;Frequent Items;Oral History Testimonies;Oral History Projects;Cambridge International Corpus;VFW;Corpus Size