Title of article :
The forests behind the trees
Author/Authors :
John Nerbonne، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
8
From page :
1581
To page :
1588
Abstract :
Syntactic databases are increasingly available and are put to a variety of uses, including serving as organized reference material for descriptive and theoretical syntacticians. Dense databases recording fine variation within a single language area, so-called “microvariation”, play a prominent role with respect to this use. In addition the large collections allow syntactic variation to be studied quantitatively in dialectology and in the analysis of second-language, pidgin and creole varieties. The large collections enable exploratory, “data-mining” approaches, and are well positioned to detect statistical tendencies that may be imperfect, and therefore not universal. Finally, some researchers have hypothesized that syntactic features may be more stable over long periods of time than lexical or phonetic features and are investigating whether syntactic structure bears a signal of historical relatedness. This work too requires quantitative analysis that is only possible with large, systematic collections. This article introduces a special issue of Lingua devoted to presenting and exploring research using large syntactic databases.
Keywords :
Syntax , Diachronic syntax , Aggregation , Data-mining , Syntactic variation , Syntactic database
Journal title :
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Record number :
1290805
Link To Document :
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