References (9)
References
Aijmer, K. 2018. “That’s well bad”: Some new intensifiers in spoken British English. In Corpus Approaches to Contemporary British Speech: Sociolinguistic Studies of the Spoken BNC2014, V. Brezina, R. Love & K. Aijmer (eds), 60–95. London: Routledge. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Biber, D. 2015. Stance and grammatical complexity in conversation: An unlikely partnership discovered through corpus analysis. Corpus Linguistics Research 1: 1–19. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Culpeper J. & Kytö, M. 2010. Early Modern English Dialogues: Spoken Interaction as Writing. Cambridge: CUP.Google Scholar
Jonsson, E. 2015. Conversational Writing: A Multidimensional Study of Synchronous and Supersynchronous Computer-mediated Communication. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Linell, P. 2005. The Written Language Bias in Linguistics: Its Nature, Origins and Transformations. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Rehn, J. (ed.). 1996. Nya professorer vid Uppsala universitet: Installationer våren 1996. Uppsala: Uppsala University.Google Scholar
Smitterberg, E. 2016. Extracting data from historical material. In The Cambridge Handbook of English Historical Linguistics, M. Kytö & P. Pahta (eds), 181–199. Cambridge: CUP. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Smitterberg, E. Forthcoming. Language Change in Late Modern English: Colloquialization and Densification. Cambridge: CUP.Google Scholar
Stubbs, M. 1996. Text and Corpus Analysis: Computer-assisted Studies of Language and Culture. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar