Research Methods in Language Variation and Change
Herausgeber: Krug, Manfred; Schluter, Julia; Schl Ter, Julia
Research Methods in Language Variation and Change
Herausgeber: Krug, Manfred; Schluter, Julia; Schl Ter, Julia
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This systematic, state-of-the-art survey is ideal for both novice researchers and professionals interested in extending their methodological repertoires.
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This systematic, state-of-the-art survey is ideal for both novice researchers and professionals interested in extending their methodological repertoires.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 538
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 1099g
- ISBN-13: 9781107004900
- ISBN-10: 110700490X
- Artikelnr.: 39756786
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 538
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 175mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 1099g
- ISBN-13: 9781107004900
- ISBN-10: 110700490X
- Artikelnr.: 39756786
Introduction: investigating language variation and change Manfred Krug,
Julia Schlüter and Anette Rosenbach; Part I. Collecting Empirical Data:
Section 1. Fieldwork and Linguistic Mapping: 1. Collecting ethnographic and
sociolinguistic data Daniel Schreier; 2. Using participant observation and
social network analysis Lynn Clark and Graeme Trousdale; 3. Computer
mapping of language data William A. Kretzschmar, Jr; Section 2. Eliciting
Linguistic Data: 4. Designing and conducting interviews and questionnaires
Manfred Krug and Katrin Sell; 5. Obtaining introspective acceptability
judgements Thomas Hoffmann; Section 3. Alternatives to Standard Reference
Corpora: 6. Using historical literature databases as corpora Julia
Schlüter; 7. Using the OED quotations database as a diachronic corpus
Günter Rohdenburg; 8. Using web-based data for the study of global English
Marianne Hundt; Part II. Analysing Empirical Data: Section 4. Corpus
Analysis: 9. Using 'small' corpora to document ongoing grammatical change
Christian Mair; 10. Using tag sequences to retrieve grammatical structures
Sebastian Hoffmann; 11. Categorizing syntactic constructions in a corpus
Nicholas Smith and Elena Seoane; Section 5. Phonetic and Phonological
Analysis: 12. Analysing phonetic and phonological variation on the
segmental level Ulrike Gut; 13. Analysing phonetic and phonological
variation on the suprasegmental level Ulrike Gut; 14. Reconstructing stress
in Old and Middle English Donka Minkova; Section 6. Combinations of
Multiple Types of Data: 15. Combining elicitation data with corpus data
Anette Rosenbach; 16. Using convergent evidence from psycholinguistics and
usage Marilyn Ford and Joan Bresnan; 17. Applying typological methods in
dialectology Lieselotte Anderwald and Bernd Kortmann; Part III. Evaluating
Empirical Data: Section 7. Basic Statistical Analysis: 18. Quantifying
variation and estimating the effects of sample size on the frequencies of
linguistic variables Heikki Mannila, Terttu Nevalainen and Helena
Raumolin-Brunberg; 19. Elementary statistical testing with R Stefan Th.
Gries; Section 8. Multifactorial Analysis: 20. Analysing and interpreting
variation in the sociolinguistic tradition Sali A. Tagliamonte; 21.
Identifying multidimensional patterns of variation across registers Douglas
Biber and Bethany Gray; 22. Computing linguistic distances between
varieties April McMahon and Warren Maguire; 23. Analysing aggregated
linguistic data Benedikt Szmrecsanyi.
Julia Schlüter and Anette Rosenbach; Part I. Collecting Empirical Data:
Section 1. Fieldwork and Linguistic Mapping: 1. Collecting ethnographic and
sociolinguistic data Daniel Schreier; 2. Using participant observation and
social network analysis Lynn Clark and Graeme Trousdale; 3. Computer
mapping of language data William A. Kretzschmar, Jr; Section 2. Eliciting
Linguistic Data: 4. Designing and conducting interviews and questionnaires
Manfred Krug and Katrin Sell; 5. Obtaining introspective acceptability
judgements Thomas Hoffmann; Section 3. Alternatives to Standard Reference
Corpora: 6. Using historical literature databases as corpora Julia
Schlüter; 7. Using the OED quotations database as a diachronic corpus
Günter Rohdenburg; 8. Using web-based data for the study of global English
Marianne Hundt; Part II. Analysing Empirical Data: Section 4. Corpus
Analysis: 9. Using 'small' corpora to document ongoing grammatical change
Christian Mair; 10. Using tag sequences to retrieve grammatical structures
Sebastian Hoffmann; 11. Categorizing syntactic constructions in a corpus
Nicholas Smith and Elena Seoane; Section 5. Phonetic and Phonological
Analysis: 12. Analysing phonetic and phonological variation on the
segmental level Ulrike Gut; 13. Analysing phonetic and phonological
variation on the suprasegmental level Ulrike Gut; 14. Reconstructing stress
in Old and Middle English Donka Minkova; Section 6. Combinations of
Multiple Types of Data: 15. Combining elicitation data with corpus data
Anette Rosenbach; 16. Using convergent evidence from psycholinguistics and
usage Marilyn Ford and Joan Bresnan; 17. Applying typological methods in
dialectology Lieselotte Anderwald and Bernd Kortmann; Part III. Evaluating
Empirical Data: Section 7. Basic Statistical Analysis: 18. Quantifying
variation and estimating the effects of sample size on the frequencies of
linguistic variables Heikki Mannila, Terttu Nevalainen and Helena
Raumolin-Brunberg; 19. Elementary statistical testing with R Stefan Th.
Gries; Section 8. Multifactorial Analysis: 20. Analysing and interpreting
variation in the sociolinguistic tradition Sali A. Tagliamonte; 21.
Identifying multidimensional patterns of variation across registers Douglas
Biber and Bethany Gray; 22. Computing linguistic distances between
varieties April McMahon and Warren Maguire; 23. Analysing aggregated
linguistic data Benedikt Szmrecsanyi.
Introduction: investigating language variation and change Manfred Krug,
Julia Schlüter and Anette Rosenbach; Part I. Collecting Empirical Data:
Section 1. Fieldwork and Linguistic Mapping: 1. Collecting ethnographic and
sociolinguistic data Daniel Schreier; 2. Using participant observation and
social network analysis Lynn Clark and Graeme Trousdale; 3. Computer
mapping of language data William A. Kretzschmar, Jr; Section 2. Eliciting
Linguistic Data: 4. Designing and conducting interviews and questionnaires
Manfred Krug and Katrin Sell; 5. Obtaining introspective acceptability
judgements Thomas Hoffmann; Section 3. Alternatives to Standard Reference
Corpora: 6. Using historical literature databases as corpora Julia
Schlüter; 7. Using the OED quotations database as a diachronic corpus
Günter Rohdenburg; 8. Using web-based data for the study of global English
Marianne Hundt; Part II. Analysing Empirical Data: Section 4. Corpus
Analysis: 9. Using 'small' corpora to document ongoing grammatical change
Christian Mair; 10. Using tag sequences to retrieve grammatical structures
Sebastian Hoffmann; 11. Categorizing syntactic constructions in a corpus
Nicholas Smith and Elena Seoane; Section 5. Phonetic and Phonological
Analysis: 12. Analysing phonetic and phonological variation on the
segmental level Ulrike Gut; 13. Analysing phonetic and phonological
variation on the suprasegmental level Ulrike Gut; 14. Reconstructing stress
in Old and Middle English Donka Minkova; Section 6. Combinations of
Multiple Types of Data: 15. Combining elicitation data with corpus data
Anette Rosenbach; 16. Using convergent evidence from psycholinguistics and
usage Marilyn Ford and Joan Bresnan; 17. Applying typological methods in
dialectology Lieselotte Anderwald and Bernd Kortmann; Part III. Evaluating
Empirical Data: Section 7. Basic Statistical Analysis: 18. Quantifying
variation and estimating the effects of sample size on the frequencies of
linguistic variables Heikki Mannila, Terttu Nevalainen and Helena
Raumolin-Brunberg; 19. Elementary statistical testing with R Stefan Th.
Gries; Section 8. Multifactorial Analysis: 20. Analysing and interpreting
variation in the sociolinguistic tradition Sali A. Tagliamonte; 21.
Identifying multidimensional patterns of variation across registers Douglas
Biber and Bethany Gray; 22. Computing linguistic distances between
varieties April McMahon and Warren Maguire; 23. Analysing aggregated
linguistic data Benedikt Szmrecsanyi.
Julia Schlüter and Anette Rosenbach; Part I. Collecting Empirical Data:
Section 1. Fieldwork and Linguistic Mapping: 1. Collecting ethnographic and
sociolinguistic data Daniel Schreier; 2. Using participant observation and
social network analysis Lynn Clark and Graeme Trousdale; 3. Computer
mapping of language data William A. Kretzschmar, Jr; Section 2. Eliciting
Linguistic Data: 4. Designing and conducting interviews and questionnaires
Manfred Krug and Katrin Sell; 5. Obtaining introspective acceptability
judgements Thomas Hoffmann; Section 3. Alternatives to Standard Reference
Corpora: 6. Using historical literature databases as corpora Julia
Schlüter; 7. Using the OED quotations database as a diachronic corpus
Günter Rohdenburg; 8. Using web-based data for the study of global English
Marianne Hundt; Part II. Analysing Empirical Data: Section 4. Corpus
Analysis: 9. Using 'small' corpora to document ongoing grammatical change
Christian Mair; 10. Using tag sequences to retrieve grammatical structures
Sebastian Hoffmann; 11. Categorizing syntactic constructions in a corpus
Nicholas Smith and Elena Seoane; Section 5. Phonetic and Phonological
Analysis: 12. Analysing phonetic and phonological variation on the
segmental level Ulrike Gut; 13. Analysing phonetic and phonological
variation on the suprasegmental level Ulrike Gut; 14. Reconstructing stress
in Old and Middle English Donka Minkova; Section 6. Combinations of
Multiple Types of Data: 15. Combining elicitation data with corpus data
Anette Rosenbach; 16. Using convergent evidence from psycholinguistics and
usage Marilyn Ford and Joan Bresnan; 17. Applying typological methods in
dialectology Lieselotte Anderwald and Bernd Kortmann; Part III. Evaluating
Empirical Data: Section 7. Basic Statistical Analysis: 18. Quantifying
variation and estimating the effects of sample size on the frequencies of
linguistic variables Heikki Mannila, Terttu Nevalainen and Helena
Raumolin-Brunberg; 19. Elementary statistical testing with R Stefan Th.
Gries; Section 8. Multifactorial Analysis: 20. Analysing and interpreting
variation in the sociolinguistic tradition Sali A. Tagliamonte; 21.
Identifying multidimensional patterns of variation across registers Douglas
Biber and Bethany Gray; 22. Computing linguistic distances between
varieties April McMahon and Warren Maguire; 23. Analysing aggregated
linguistic data Benedikt Szmrecsanyi.