A5) LANFRANCO BIORGGIO, TYMOFEIENKO;"Going to" vs. "gonna": frequency change in apparent time (BNC + BNCweb)
Corpus: British National Corpus (BNC)
Programs: BNCweb
Tasks:
- Going to can undergo contraction to gonna. Restricting your search to the different age groups of speakers in the spoken part of the BNC, try to find out
- if the absolute frequency of the going to-future (i.e. going to plus gonna) has changed in apparent time: Do younger speakers use it more or less often than older speakers per one million words of text?
- if the relative frequency of gonna, expressed as a percentage of going to plus gonna, has changed in apparent time: Has the share of contractions increased or decreased across generations of speakers?
- Can you think of a logical connection between the absolute frequency of the construction and the relative frequency of contracted variants?
- Why does such an analysis of contracted forms in spoken and transcribed language have to be taken with a pinch of salt?
Notes:
- The corpus and the BNCweb interface can be accessed via the departmental server: https://eng-ling.uni-bamberg.de/
- You need to sign up for a free user account to get access to the corpora (also here https://eng-ling.uni-bamberg.de/).
- The quick reference guide (https://eng-ling.uni-bamberg.de/bncweb/Simple_query_language.pdf) can also be accessed via the BNCweb interface.
- While going to can be typed in in normal orthography, gonna has to be separated into gon na.
Solution: Mini-project A5.pdf
שינוי אחרון: יום שבת, 14 נובמבר 2015, 10:39 PM