@incollection{FussKonopkaTrawińskietal.2018, author = {Eric Fu{\"s} and Marek Konopka and Beata Trawiński and Ulrich Hermann Wa{\"s}ner}, title = {Grammar and Corpora – past, present, and future}, series = {Grammar and corpora 2016}, editor = {Eric Fu{\"s} and Marek Konopka and Beata Trawiński and Ulrich Hermann Wa{\"s}ner}, publisher = {Heidelberg University Publishing}, address = {Heidelberg}, isbn = {978-3-946054-82-5}, doi = {10.17885/heiup.361.509}, url = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:mh39-74736}, pages = {11 -- 24}, year = {2018}, abstract = {In recent years, the availability of large annotated and searchable corpora, together with a new interest in the empirical foundation and validation of linguistic theory and description, has sparked a surge of novel and interesting work using corpus-based methods to study the grammar of natural languages. However, a look at relevant current research on the grammar of the Germanic, Romance, and Slavic languages reveals a variety of different theoretical approaches and empirical foci, which can be traced back to different philological and linguistic traditions. Still, this current state of affairs should not be seen as an obstacle but as an ideal basis for a fruitful exchange of ideas between different research paradigms.}, language = {en} }