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Guy Aston, Ylva Berglund Prytz, & Lou Burnard, http://www.natcorp.oucs.ox.ac.uk Exploring BNC-XML with Xaira
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What is the BNC? a snapshot of British English, taken at the end of the 20 th century 100 million words in approx 4000 different text samples, both spoken (10%) and written (90%) synchronic (1990-4), sampled, general purpose corpus available under licence; latest edition is BNC- XML (13 mar 2007)
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Distinctive features of the BNC non-opportunistic design standardized markup system structural annotation word class annotation contextual information general availability...in these respects, the BNC remains distinctive, twenty years on!
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What's new in BNC-XML? No systematic proofing, re-editing, or re-parsing... Same as BNC World: texts (minus duplicates) POS tagging (but extended) Additions simpler pos codes lemmata Improvements Duplications, categorizations, segmentations... Coded descriptions
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BNC-XML regroups texts using additional classification criteria
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FACTSHEET WHAT IS AIDS ? AIDS ( Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome ) is a condition caused by a virus called HIV ( Human Immuno Deficiency Virus ). … …
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What is the markup for? It makes it possible for you to distinguish aids=SUBST from aids=VERB distinguish occurrences in writing from ones in speech distinguish occurrences in headings from ones in paragraphs identify contextual units like sentences and paragraphs FACTSHEET WHAT IS AIDS? AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is a condition caused by a virus called HIV (Human Immuno Deficiency Virus).
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Has English moved on since the BNC? types of text e-mail web pages / blogs SMS personal letters topics globalization internet Elvis Word Perfect how comparable is the Web?
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Out of date? The composition (and date) of any corpus affects inferences drawn from it There aren't many alternatives Web-as-corpus: 85% of written texts aren't on the web - and spoken texts? Results from monitor corpora non-replicable Copyright permissions unrepeatable Quantitative and qualitative comparative evaluations of BNC coverage are needed but “it's surprising how much is there”
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What can you do with it? The BNC is a problematizing resource... complements (and corrects) intuition increases learner autonomy critiques the myth of the native speaker ... for teacher and learner alike XML makes it more accessible by non specialist software (eg A0S in web browser)
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You can use XAIRA to... find sample sentences cloze tests check what the text book says grammar vs usage (dis)confirm intuitions find sample specialist texts make serendipitous discoveries
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Finding sample sentences some phrases that take the gerund there's no point.... how / what about... generatable phrases [comparative] and [comparative] sentence structures [s-initial interjection]
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(Dis)confirming intuition about choices have a problem + infinitive or gerund? do you make or take decisions? about vocabulary which nouns collocate with hard? about grammar I would be grateful if you [modal]?
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Finding specialised texts The BNC has an extraordinary range travel agent brochures, weather reports, formal invitations, advertising, children's talk, academic discourse, doctor's consultations, marketing meetings, oral history, jokes and anecdotes, high literature, best-sellers, leaflets, personal diaries... The problem is finding it use WLD principle
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For learners... The same as teachers Pointers to follow in the quest for idiomicity collocations colligations semantic preferences semantic prosodies/pragmatic associations associations with particular genres/domains Can learners use the BNC “autonomously”?
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The ins and outs of autonomous use Learners may need warning to... focus on patterns which recur, without necessarily trying to explain all the data avoid overgeneralisation ... and encouragement to be curious browse the context investigate exceptions
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What are ins and outs? (and are they the same as ups and downs)? 50 occurrences, sort left 2 colligation: (all) the ins and outs of semantic preference: know/learn/understand/keep up with/get to grips with/get down to/forget; explain/teach/guide through/give/look at semantic prosody: difficulty(?) analysis - mainly spoken conversation, but numbers too small for reliable inference
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Exploring idioms make a pointthe point ispoint out have a pointhigh pointpoint to in point of factstarting point no point in point of viewat X pointwhat‘s the point to the pointsee/get/grasp the point Example: idioms with point
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Exploring features of speech PS6NR >: [laugh] he's not a millionaire yet. PS6NM >: No so perhaps not, mm.Oh perhaps, perhaps he, perhaps he has the knowledge but has difficulty in er navigating his way to the betting shop to to do anything about it. PS6NR >: [laugh] PS6NM >: Anyway erm PS6NR >: Right I've... results see this is PS6NM >: Mm. PS6NR >: this is really what I'm [... ] PS6NM >: Yeah. PS6NR >: comparison of subjects within groups and between groups I thought that's PS6NM >: Yeah, mm. PS6NR >: like a typical [... ] Examples: spoken discourse markers and back channels
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Exploring productivity of affixes How many adjectives can you think of ending in -ish? babyish, bearish,.... wankish, whorish, yobbish How many nouns starting with anti-? How about verbs?
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Creative writing Paul Auster: City of Glass It was the wrong number that started it, the telephone ringing three times in the dead of the night, and the voice on the other end asking for someone he was not. Examples: story beginnings Ian McEwan: Saturday Everyone agrees, airliners look different these days, predatory and doomed.
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Where can I get one? BNC XML: http://www.natcorp.ox.ac.uk now available on DVD standalone single user licence or institutional licence discounted price till end June XAIRA Delivered free with the BNC (and also available free from http://xaira.sf.net)http://xaira.sf.net Usable with any XML corpus Usable/ish on any platform
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