Abstract
The chapter examines the use of the
emerging pragmatic marker you get me
(e.g. I'm just gonna give her a little
backhand or whatever cos she needs to
learn you get me?) in the 1.5 million word
Multicultural London English Corpus
(MLEC) (2008). The corpus contains
sociolinguistic interviews with London
English speakers and the metadata
provide information about a speaker’s
ethnicity, sex, and age group. The
methodology combines automated and
manual analysis, and draws on two related
previous studies (Gabrielatos, Torgersen,
Hoffmann, & Fox, 2010; Torgersen,
Gabrielatos, Hoffmann, & Fox, 2011),
which used the Linguistic Innovators
Corpus (LIC) (2005), a 1.4 million word
corpus of sociolinguistic interviews with
inner- and outer-London speakers, also
marked-up for ethnicity, sex and age, as
well as locality. The analysis focuses on the
extent of use of you get me, as well as its
its variants and discourse functions in
relation to the sociolinguistic factors
outlined above. The analysis also
incorporates comparisons with the use of
you get me in LIC, in which ethnicity
emerged as the strongest factor.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Title of host publication | Studies in Corpus- Based Sociolinguistics |
Editors | Eric Friginal |
Place of Publication | Routledge |
Publisher | Oxford |
Chapter | 7 |
Pages | 176-196 |
Number of pages | 21 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781315527819 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781138694613 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 31 Jul 2017 |
Keywords
- corpus linguistics
- sociolinguistics
- Multicultural London English
- pragmaticmarkers
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'A corpus-based analysis of the pragmatic marker you get me'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Profiles
-
Dr Costas Gabrielatos
- English & Creative Arts - Reader (Corpus Linguistics & Eng. Lang)
Person: Academic