Abstract
This article provides a corpus-based investigation into shell nouns. Shell
nouns perform a variety of referential functions and express speaker stance.
The investigation was motivated by the fact that past research in this area
has been primarily based on written texts. Very little is known about the use
of shell nouns in speech. The study used the ICE-GB corpus of contemporary British English and investigated cataphoric shell nouns complemented
by appositive that-clauses across fine-grained spoken and written registers.
It has revealed that the deployment of shell nouns is governed by the principle of register formality definable in terms of contextual configurations of
the Field-Tenor-Mode complex rather than the mode of production. Additionally, the study has uncovered the frequent use of a small core set of shell
nouns common across speech and writing. Hence it argues that shell nouns
are part and parcel of spoken and written discourse and that they pertain
more to grammar than to lexis.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 219-247 |
| Journal | International Journal of Corpus Linguistics |
| Volume | 26 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| Online published | 9 Apr 2021 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jul 2021 |
Research Keywords
- register formality
- spoken discourse
- written discourse
- field-tenor-mode complex
- ICE-GB
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