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"Binnendeutsch" und "Hauptvariante Bundesrepublik". Zu Peter von Polenz' Kritik an Hugo Moser
(1989)
Transdisciplinary research is research not only on, but also for and, most of all, with practitioners. In the research framework of transdisciplinarity, scholars and practitioners collaborate throughout research projects with the aim of mutual learning. This paper shows the value transdisciplinarity can add to media linguistics. It does so by investigating the digital literacy shift in journalism: the change, in the last two decades, from the predominance of a writing mode that we have termed focused writing to a mode we have called writing-by-the-way. Large corpora of writing process data have been generated and analyzed with the multimethod approach of progression analysis in order to combine analytical depth with breadth. On the object level of doing writing in journalism, results show that the general trend towards writing-by-the-way opens up new niches for focused writing. On a meta level of doing research, findings explain under what conditions transdisciplinarity allows for deeper insights into the medialinguistic object of investigation.
Die traditionelle Einordnung von man als Indefinitpronomen wird in Zweifel gezogen, andere Zuordnungsmöglichkeiten werden geprüft. Zu diesem Zweck werden die Morphosyntax und die Semantik von man herausgearbeitet. Dabei steht insbesondere die Dichotomie 'generische' versus 'partikuläre' Verwendung zur Debatte. Abschließend wird ein kurzer Blick auf man aus der Lernerperspektive und im Sprachvergleich geworfen.
The paper reports the results of the curation project ChatCorpus2CLARIN. The goal of the project was to develop a workflow and resources for the integration of an existing chat corpus into the CLARIN-D research infrastructure for language resources and tools in the Humanities and the Social Sciences (http://clarin-d.de). The paper presents an overview of the resources and practices developed in the project, describes the added value of the resource after its integration and discusses, as an outlook, to what extent these practices can be considered best practices which may be useful for the annotation and representation of other CMC and social media corpora.
This study explores how ‘gatherings’ turn into ‘encounters’ in a virtual world (VW) context. Most communication technologies enable only focused encounters between distributed participants, but in VWs both gatherings and encounters can occur. We present close sequential analysis of moments when after a silent gathering, interaction among participants in a VW is gradually resumed, and also investigate the social actions in the verbal (re-)opening turns. Our findings show that like in face-to-face situations, also in VWs participants often use different types of embodied resources to achieve the transition, rather than rely on verbal means only. However, the transition process in VWs has distinctive characteristics compared to the one in face-to-face situations. We discuss how participants in a VW use virtually embodied pre-beginnings to display what we call encounter-readiness, instead of displaying lack of presence by avatar stillness. The data comprise 40 episodes of video-recorded team interactions in a VW.
This paper focusss on the first Slavonic-Romanian lexicons, compiled in the second half of the 17th century and their use(rs), proposing a method of investigating the manner in which lexical information available in the above corpus relates, if at all, to the vocabulary of texts from the same period. We chose to investigate their relation to an anonymous Old Testament translation made from Church Slavonic, also from the second half of the 17th century, which was supposed to be produced in the same geographical area, in the same Church Slavonic school or even by the same author as the lexicons. After applying a lemmatizer on both the Biblical text (Books of Genesis and Daniel) and the Romanian material from the lexicons, we analyse the results and double the statistical analysis with a series of case studies, focusing on some common lexemes that might be an indicator of the relatedness of the texts. Even if the analysis points out that the lexicons might not have been compiled as a tool for the translation of religious texts, it proves to be a useful method that reveals interesting data and provides the basis for more extensive approaches.
Die sprachlichen Veränderungen der letzten 20 Jahre sind von zwei Zeitabschnitten gekennzeichnet, die in Bezug auf die Wortschatzentwicklung unterschiedlicher nicht hätten sein können: Der erste, kurze, ist von der Wendezeit – mit auffälligem, meist nur vorübergehendem Lexemwandel – und dem Beitritt der DDR zur Bundesrepublik – mit dem Verschwinden bzw. Austausch des größten Teils des DDR-typischen Wortschatzes – geprägt. Der zweite, wesentlich längere Abschnitt ist von der Entwicklung im vereinigten Deutschland mit einem im Vergleich unauffälligen, weil kontinuierlichen Wortschatzwandel bestimmt.