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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Formulaic Sequences

Acquisition, processing and use

Edited by Norbert Schmitt
University of Nottingham

2004. x, 304 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 1707 3 / EUR 98.00
978 1 58811 499 0 / USD 147.00
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PaperbackIn stock
978 90 272 1708 0 / EUR 36.00
978 1 58811 500 3 / USD 54.00

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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9575 0 / EUR 98.00 / USD 147.00
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Formulaic sequences (FS) are now recognized as an essential element of language use. However, research on FS has generally been limited to a focus on description, or on the place of FS in L1 acquisition. This volume opens new directions in FS research, concentrating on how FS are acquired and processed by the mind, both in the L1 and L2. The ten original studies in the volume illustrate the L2 acquisition of FS, the relationship between L1 and L2 FS, the relationship between corpus recurrence of FS and their psycholinguistic reality, the processes involved in reading FS, and pedagogical issues in teaching FS. The studies use a wide range of methodologies, many of them innovative, and thus the volume serves as a model for future research in the area. The volume begins with three survey chapters offering a background on the characteristics and measurement of FS.


Table of contents

Preface
viii
Formulaic sequences in action: An introduction
Norbert Schmitt and Ronald Carter
1–22
Measurement of formulaic sequences
John Read and Paul Nation
23–35
Formulaic performance in conventionalised varieties of speech
Koenraad Kuiper
37–54
Knowledge and acquisition of formulaic sequences: A longitudinal study
Norbert Schmitt, Zoltán Dörnyei, Svenja Adolphs and Valerie Durow
55–86
Individual differences and their effects on formulaic sequence acquisition
Zoltán Dörnyei, Valerie Durow and Khawla Zahran
87–106
Social-cultural integration and the development of formulaic sequences
Svenja Adolphs and Valerie Durow
107–126
Are corpus-derived recurrent clusters psycholinguistically valid?
Norbert Schmitt, Sarah Grandage and Svenja Adolphs
127–151
The eyes have it: An eye-movement study into the processing of formulaic sequences
Geoffrey Underwood, Norbert Schmitt and Adam Galpin
153–172
Exploring the processing of formulaic sequences through a self-paced reading task
Norbert Schmitt and Geoffrey Underwood
173–189
Comparing knowledge of formulaic sequences across L1, L2, L3, and L4
Carol Spöttl and Michael McCarthy
191–225
The effect of typographic salience on the look up and comprehension of unknown formulaic sequences
Hugh Bishop
227–248
‘Here’s one I prepared earlier’: Formulaic language learning on television
Alison Wray
249–268
Facilitating the acquisition of formulaic sequences: An exploratory study in an EAP context
Martha A. Jones and Sandra Haywood
269–300
Index


The volume as a whole is a very accessible collection of papers that show a good range of empirical studies on the acquisition and processing of formulaic sequences.
Cornelia Tschichold, University of Neuchatel, on Linguist List Vol. 15-2427, 2004

Second Language teachers and researchers have demonstrated a growing interest in formulaic language in recent years, and Schmitt's edited collection presents a welcome, stimulating range of studies on the acquisition and processing of formulaic sequences by L2 learners.
Marian Rossiter, University of Alberta, in The Canadian Language Review 62(3), 2006

This tome presents an interesting array of research that furthers our developing understanding of the acquisition and processing of formulaic sequences. Because it focuses predominantly on L2 learning, Schmitt's volume will be of considerable interest to both researchers and L2 educators. It makes a significant contribution to the field: the studies within it raise a myriad of complex questions to guide future studies on the acquisition and processing of formulaic sequences, and they encourage readers to consider a wider range of methods and contexts in their search for answers.
Marian Rossiter, University of Alberta, in The Canadian Language Review 62(3), 2006

This book can be read with some pleasure by most classroom teachers, and there is much that they, as well as scholars in applied linguistics, can learn from it.
Bruce A. Beattie, Cleveland State University, in The Modern Language Journal Vol. 90(3), 2006