- 200 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
This book applies a set of corpus investigation techniques to the study of evaluation, or stance, or affect, in naturally-occurring discourse. Evaluative language indicates opinions, attitudes, and judgments. It is an important part of activities such as persuading someone that a particular viewpoint is correct, or in constructing knowledge from a different number of theories. This book argues that phraseology--regularities or patterns in language identifiable from corpus studies--is important to the study of evaluative language. It makes a number of more specific arguments: that modal meaning is expressed through particular phrases and not only through modal verbs; that figurative phrases are used to intensify evaluation; and that patterns of use may be exploited to achieve an automatic identification of evaluations. It also builds on the author's previous work in exploring how films and journalism use language and images to build knowledge from ideas.
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Table of contents
- Routledge Advances in Corpus Linguistics
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- 1 Evaluative Language, Phraseology and Corpus Linguistics
- 2 Appraisal, Stance, Evaluation
- 3 Status in Written Texts and Multi-Modal Texts
- 4 Evaluation, Quantity and Meaning
- 5 Modal-Like Expressions
- 6 Corpus Approaches to Investigating Status
- 7 Grammar Patterns, Local Grammars and Evaluation
- 8 Phraseology, Intensity and Density
- 9 Conclusion
- Appendix to Chapter 5
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index