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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Formulaic Language

Volume 1. Distribution and historical change

Edited by Roberta Corrigan, Edith A. Moravcsik, Hamid Ouali and Kathleen M. Wheatley
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

2009. xxiv, 315 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2995 3 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9017 5 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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This book is the first of the two-volume collection of papers on formulaic language. The collection is among the first ones in the field. The book draws attention to the ritualized, repetitive side of language, which to some estimates make up over 50% of spoken and written text. While in the linguistic literature, the creative and innovative aspects of language have been amply highlighted, conventionalized, pre-fabricated, “off-the-shelf” expressions have been paid less attention – an imbalance that this book attempts to remedy. The first of the two volumes addresses the very concept of formulaic language and provides studies that explore the grammatical and semantic properties of formulae, their stylistic distribution within languages, and their evolution in the course of language history. Since most of the papers are readily accessible to readers with only basic familiarity with linguistics, besides being a resource in linguistic research, the book may be used in courses on discourse structure, pragmatics, semantics, language acquisition, and syntax, as well as being a resource in linguistic research.


Table of contents

Preface
ix
Introduction. Approaches to the study of formulae
Roberta Corrigan, Edith A. Moravcsik, Hamid Ouali and Kathleen M. Wheatley
xi–xxiv
Part I. What is Formulaic Language
Grammarians' languages versus humanists' languages and the place of speech act formulas in models of linguistic competence
Andrew Pawley
3–26
Identifying formulaic language: Persistent challenges and new opportunities
Alison Wray
27–52
Part II. Structure and distribution
Formulaic tendencies of demonstrative clefts in spoken English
Andreea S. Calude
55–76
Formulaic language and the relater category – the case of about
Jean Hudson and Maria Wiktorsson
77–96
The aim is to analyze NP: The function of prefabricated chunks in academic texts
Elma Kerz and Florian Haas
97–116
Fixedness in Japanese adjectives in conversation: Toward a new understanding of a lexical (‘part-of-speech’) category
Tsuyoshi Ono and Sandra A. Thompson
117–146
Genre-controlled constructions in written language quotatives: A case study of English quotatives from two major genres
Jessie Sams
147–170
Some remarks on the evaluative connotations of toponymic idioms in a contrastive perspective
Joanna Szerszunowicz
171–184
Part III. Historical change
The role of prefabs in grammaticization: How the particular and the general interact in language change
Joan Bybee and Rena Torres Cacoullos
187–218
Formulaic models and formulaicity in Classical and Modern Standard Arabic
Giuliano Lancioni
219–238
A corpus study of lexicalized formulaic sequences with preposition + hand
Hans Lindquist
239–256
The embodiment/culture continuum: A historical study of conceptual metaphor
James J. Mischler, III
257–272
From ‘remaining’ to ‘becoming’ in Spanish: The role of prefabs in the development of the construction quedar(se) + ADJECTIVE
Damián Vergara Wilson
273–296
Author index
I-1–I-9
Subject index
I-11–I-19