Lim, Dong Ok
Usage-based approaches claim that language acquisition is sensitive to frequency. Thus, learners can utilize and produce more schematic language structures as they gain more exposure to the language. This understanding has made a significant contribution to learner corpus research. To date, a plethora of studies has explored various linguistic stru...
Wu, Junyu Tissari, Heli
Published in
Chinese Journal of Applied Linguistics
It is difficult for L2 English learners in general, and especially Chinese learners of English, to form idiomatic collocations. This article presents a comparison of the use of intensifier-verb collocations in English by native speaker students and Chinese ESL learners, paying particular attention to verbs which collocate with intensifiers. The dat...
Kor Chahine, Irina Uetova, Ekaterina
This study relies on error annotation of Russian texts written by French students and collected in the Russian Learner Corpus (RLC, http://www.web-corpora.net/RLC/), and observes error progression in two groups of learners, foreign learners (FLs) and heritage learners (HLs), and across all CEFR language proficiency levels (A1–C2). The errors are an...
Wu, Tianqi Wang, Min
Published in
Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
This study investigates the developmental trajectory of L2 English progressive construction with a focus on frequency, verb-construction contingency and semantic prototypicality. Comparisons were made on the use of the progressive construction in argumentative essays written by Chinese learners at three different proficiency levels and English nati...
Smirnova, Elizaveta Strinyuk, Svetlana
Published in
Journal of English as a Lingua Franca
The fact that English has become a lingua franca of academic communication has led to increased attention to teaching English for academic purposes (EAP) at the academia. Academic discourse markers, such as hedges, have been an important topic in academic writing research whose prime aim is helping non-Anglophone researchers to present their resear...
Rastelli, Stefano
Published in
Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
This study utilized unidirectional association score ΔP to track perfective morpheme productivity in longitudinal spoken L2 Italian data. Research questions concerned whether early L2 perfectives were contingent upon telicity of predicates, whether lexeme–morpheme association changed as proficiency increased, and whether distribution of perfectives...
Laarmann-Quante, Ronja Ortmann, Katrin Ehlert, Anna Masloch, Simon Scholz, Doreen Belke, Eva Dipper, Stefanie
Published in
Behavior Research Methods
Compared to early language development, later changes to the language system during orthography and literacy acquisition have not yet been researched in detail. We present a longitudinal corpus of texts on short picture stories written by German primary school children between grades 2 and 4 and grades 3 and 4. It includes 1,922 texts with 212,505 ...
Castillo Rodríguez, Cristina López Pérez, Sidoní
Learner corpora provide teachers with a rich source of real learners’ productions in a given language. In fact, teachers from a foreign or second language (FL or L2) can have an immense source of contributions, either written or oral, for analyzing certain linguistic patterns in their students. In this paper, we are aware of this situation and will...
Lissón, Paula Ballier, Nicolas
This article presents a corpus-based evaluation of 13 lexical diversity metrics as measures of longitudinal progression in written productions of learners of French as third language (L3). Our case study (24 learners, 3 productions per learner in the course of 3 months) deals with a semi-longitudinal corpus, where each of the productions is suppose...
Römer, Ute Skalicky, Stephen C. Ellis, Nick C.
Published in
Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
This paper draws on data from learner and native-speaker corpora as well as psycholinguistic data to gain insights into second language speaker knowledge of English verb-argument constructions (VACs). For each of 34 VACs, L1 German and L1 Spanish advanced English learners’ and English native speakers’ dominant verb–VAC associations are examined bas...