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We present a method for detecting and reconstructing separated particle verbs in a corpus of spoken German by following an approach suggested for written language. Our study shows that the method can be applied successfully to spoken language, compares different ways of dealing with structures that are specific to spoken language corpora, analyses some remaining problems, and discusses ways of optimising precision or recall for the method. The outlook sketches some possibilities for further work in related areas.
Vorschlag zu einer Typik der Kommunikationssituationen in der gesprochenen deutschen Standardsprache
(1975)
Textsorten und Soziolekte : Funktion und Reziprozität in gesprochener und geschriebener Sprache
(1973)
Im vorliegenden Beitrag wird anhand von Fallstudien der Frage nachgegangen, welche Dialektkompetenz speziell diejenigen russlanddeutschen Aussiedler der Einwanderungsgeneration mitbringen, die zwar in deutschen Sprachinseln geboren und aufgewachsen sind, einen Großteil des erwachsenen Lebens jedoch in russischsprachiger Umgebung verbracht haben.
Conversation is usually considered to be grammatically simple, while academic writing is often claimed to be structurally complex, associated primarily with a greater use of dependent clauses. Our goal in the present paper is to challenge these stereotypes, based on the results of large-scale corpus investigations. We argue that both conversation and professional academic writing are grammatically complex but that their complexities are dramatically different. Surprisingly, the traditional view that complexity is realized through extensive clausal embedding leads to the conclusion that conversation is more complex than academic writing. In contrast, written academic discourse is actually much more ‘compressed’ than elaborated, and the complexities of academic writing are realized mostly as phrasal embedding rather than embedded clauses.