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Datamining the Meaning(s) of Progress
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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5 |
Ordinary Meaning and Corpus Linguistics
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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6 |
Corpus Linguistics and the Criminal Law
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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7 |
Evidence-Based Jurisprudence Meets Legal Linguistics—Unlikely Blends Made in Germany
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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8 |
The Original Meaning of “religion” in the First Amendment: A Test Case of Originalism’s Utilization of Corpus Linguistics
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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9 |
The Dictionary as a Specialized Corpus
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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10 |
Triangulating Public Meaning: Corpus Linguistics, Immersion, and the Constitutional Record
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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The Power of Words: A Comment on Hamann and Vogel’s Evidence-Based Jurisprudence Meets Legal Linguistics—Unlikely Blends Made in Germany
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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12 |
Corpus Linguistics as a Tool in Legal Interpretation
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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A Lawyer’s Introduction to Meaning in the Framework of Corpus Linguistics
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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14 |
Advancing Law and Corpus Linguistics: Importing Principles and Practices from Survey and Content Analysis Methodologies to Improve Corpus Design and Analysis
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In: BYU Law Review (2017)
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15 |
Integrating Colloquial Arabic in the Classroom: A Study of Students’ and Teachers’ Attitude and Effect
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In: Faculty Contributions to Books (2017)
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16 |
Video-based interaction, negotiation for comprehensibility, and second language speech learning: a longitudinal study
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18 |
Spaces of consumption and senses of place: a geosemiotic analysis of three markets in Hong Kong
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Abstract:
While spaces of consumption have been extensively studied in geography, recent sociolinguistic research on metrolingual markets, semiotic landscapes, and translanguaging space present new ways to examine the linguistic, semiotic, and sensory aspects of these prosaic spaces. Integrating these perspectives in a geosemiotic framework, this paper examines the interactions in three markets in Hong Kong which have emerged as important social spaces for three participants during a larger ethnographic project. Through video walks, interviews, and participant observations, it is found that each market embodies a unique configuration of the geosemiotic aggregate and the customers selectively attended to specific modes of communication and sensory properties of the spaces, which in turn shaped their experiences of the place. Thus, this paper suggests that situated analyses of linguistic, semiotic, and material resources in everyday interactions can contribute to a better understanding of the dialogical relationship between spaces of consumption and senses of place.
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Communication (to 2020)
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URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/19708/ https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/19708/12/19708a.pdf https://doi.org/10.1080/10350330.2017.1334403 https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/19708/6/Jackie%20Lou%20Spaces%20of%20consumption%20and%20senses%20of%20place%201%20May.pdf
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19 |
Effects of sound, vocabulary and grammar learning aptitude on adult second language oral ability in foreign language classrooms
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