A long read, and some graphic details, but an excellent account of the work of forensic linguists with a number of striking example cases.
Friday, 23 January 2015
Thursday, 22 January 2015
Internet language
Not a bad article, here, though it's not watertight -- no mention of creative emoticons of the type used in the headline, for instance -- and could do with a clearer model of language functions: it tantalisingly refers to 'interpersonal' communication, but this is just an empty premodifier, I think -- rather than, accurately, noting that most of the forms mentioned really do focus on managing the tenor of Internet discourse, showing feelings and managing human speech roles in the absence of tone, expression and gesture.
Friday, 16 January 2015
The definite article in decline...
Interesting, if somewhat dubious, research. The example given from the political speeches is inconclusive -- Obama is taking quite a different sort of opening tack from Washington. Perhaps it is broad rhetorical approaches that are changing; there's nothing inherently 'formal' about 'the', though it'd be informal to use a lot of ellipsis, which might include eliding the definite article. (For instance, if I'd started sentence two of his post 'Example give from political speeches...')
Wednesday, 14 January 2015
Lesson Blog for AS and more...
Don't forget about the existence of the Park Language Lesson Blog, which is presently tracking AS lessons, and has archives of A2 Language Diversity and Child Language Acquisition lessons from previous years.
Invaluable for revision for A2s especially, and crucial to follow for current AS students -- just put your email in the box in the upper right corner (they may send you a confirmation email, so check your inbox!) and you'll have a summary of each topic winging its way to you a couple of days after the lesson -- I usually update on Mondays and/or Thursdays.
Invaluable for revision for A2s especially, and crucial to follow for current AS students -- just put your email in the box in the upper right corner (they may send you a confirmation email, so check your inbox!) and you'll have a summary of each topic winging its way to you a couple of days after the lesson -- I usually update on Mondays and/or Thursdays.
Monday, 8 December 2014
Medieval Tube Map
Fascinating to see the development of place names over the centuries -- and especially interesting identifying those places which couldn't have their modern names, because they are now named for things or people that didn't exist then...
http://londonist.com/2014/12/the-medieval-tube-map.php
http://londonist.com/2014/12/the-medieval-tube-map.php
Thursday, 4 December 2014
Coffee and Chocolate -- 17th-century style.
This is a beautifully typeset advertisement for a coffee-house in London, extolling the benefits of coffee and chocolate for health 30 years after they were introduced to England.
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Poetry Words
Some interesting findings from this simple frequency-count project: http://www.robertpeake.com/archives/6676-top-poetry-words.html
The simple, human-experience words are striking; but also the fact about the frequency in poems of words unique in the corpus.
Wednesday, 26 November 2014
Colour Words Research
Amazing visualisation of research comparing English and Chinese words for colour. Interesting for the way they break down and classify the words, and very beautifully presented.
Tuesday, 18 November 2014
Tuesday, 11 November 2014
Twitter search and analytics
Great find from A2 student Jess: this site enables you to search Tweets and other social media posts, and gives automated graphs of changes in usage over time. Great tool to gather language data, though remember that you need to do the thinking and choose your searches very carefully -- and this stream of data is always-changing.
http://topsy.com/
http://topsy.com/
Monday, 22 September 2014
Dialect Blog
A useful guide to some key features of accents on this blog -- check the menu bar at the top for US, Irish and UK accents. Some omissions, but glance at the comments for helpful discussion of these.
http://dialectblog.com/
http://dialectblog.com/
Friday, 29 August 2014
Trees of English and Architecture
The aim here is to illustrate the branching history of architecture and its roots; but the comparison to the history and development of English is interesting too, and I like their diagram. :)
http://www.period-homes.com/Previous-Issues-08/JulyForum08.html
A more English-focused version of the same thing can be found here: http://www.richardgilbert.ca/achart/public_html/articles/publications/words.htm
http://www.period-homes.com/Previous-Issues-08/JulyForum08.html
A more English-focused version of the same thing can be found here: http://www.richardgilbert.ca/achart/public_html/articles/publications/words.htm
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