Lancaster University’s ESRC funded Centre for Corpus Approaches to Social Science (CASS) and Cambridge University Press are pleased to announce the recipients of the Spoken BNC2014 Early Access Data Grants. These successful applicants will receive exclusive early access to approximately five million words of the Spoken BNC2014 via CQPweb. They will be the first to conduct research using the data and produce papers to be published in 2017, coinciding with the release of the full corpus.
The successful applicants, their institutions, and the research they intend to undertake, are:
Karin Aijmer
Gothenburg
Investigating intensifiers in the Spoken BNC2014
Karin Axelsson
Gothenburg
Canonical and non-canonical tag questions in the Spoken BNC2014: What has happened since the original BNC?
Andrew Caines1, Michael McCarthy2 and Paula Buttery1
1Cambridge, 2Nottingham
‘You still talking to me?’ The zero auxiliary progressive in spoken British English, twenty years on
Andreea Simona Calude
Waikato
Sociolinguistic Variation in Cleft Constructions – a quantitative corpus study of spontaneous conversation
Jonathan Culpeper
Lancaster
Politeness variation in England
Robert Fuchs
Münster
Recent Change in the sociolinguistics of intensifiers in British English
Kazuki Hata, Yun Pan and Steve Walsh
Newcastle
Talking the talk, walking the walk: interactional competence in and out
Tanja Hessner and Ira Gawlitzek
Mannheim
Women speak in an emotional manner; men show their authority through speech! – A corpus-based study on linguistic differences showing which gender clichés are (still) true by analysing boosters in the Spoken BNC2014
Barbara McGillivray1, Jenset Gard1 and Michael Rundell2
1Oxford, 2Lexicography MasterClass
The dative alternation revisited: fresh insights from contemporary spoken data
Laura Paterson
Lancaster
‘You can just give those documents to myself’: Untriggered reflexive pronouns in 21st century spoken British English
Chris Ryder, Jacqueline Laws and Sylvia Jaworska
Reading
From oldies to selfies: A diachronic corpus-based study into changing productivity patterns in British English suffixation
Tanja Säily1, Victoria González-Díaz2 and Jukka Suomela3
1Helsinki, 2Liverpool, 3Aalto
Variation in the productivity of adjective comparison
Deanna Wong
Macquarie
Investigating British English backchannels in the Spoken BNC2014
Thank you to everyone who applied, and congratulations to the winning proposals. Check back soon for more details on the Early Access Data Grant Scheme research.