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Adriane Moser

AdrMoser@aol.com members.aol.com/adrmoser/esl.html


Sep 15, 06 - 2:34 AM
Corpus Linguistics links

Many lexical analysis tools:
http://www.lextutor.ca/

The vocabulary profiler from above:
http://www.lextutor.ca/vp/eng/

A British corpus:
http://view.byu.edu/

A concordance based on speaker and speech event attributes:
http://micase.umdl.umich.edu/m/micase/browse.html

Another way to access the above:
http://micase.umdl.umich.edu/cgi/m/micase/micase-idx?type=revise

Psycholinguistic database:
http://www.psy.uwa.edu.au/mrcdatabase/uwa_mrc.htm

Links about corpus linguistics:
http://devoted.to/corpora

More links about corpus linguistics:
http://www.staff.amu.edu.pl/~przemka/MyCorpLing/online_resources.htm

Language Learning & Teachnology (online journal) Special Issue: Using Corpora in Language Teaching and Learning:
http://llt.msu.edu/vol5num3/default.html

Articles on corpus linguistics:
http://www.linguistics.ucsb.edu/faculty/stgries/research/overview-research.html

Articles about Latent Semantic Analysis:
http://www.knowledge-technologies.com/resPubUsingLSA.shtml
http://www.knowledge-technologies.com/resPubLSA.shtml

Articles about WordNet lexical database, a machine-readable thesaurus and semantic network :
http://mira.csci.unt.edu/~wordnet/

Cognitive linguistics articles:
http://crl.ucsd.edu/~elman/publications.html

Syllabus for a psycholinguistics class with many readings in PDF format:

http://www.psychology.stonybrook.edu/sbrennan-/psy520/syllabus_520.html

Articles by a professor in PDF format:
http://www.psychology.stonybrook.edu/sbrennan-/#pubs
Marielle Lange

widged.com/


Oct 17th, 2006 - 12:23 AM
Re: Corpus Linguistics links

Lexical Resources of all sorts (Language=English)

When a form-like icon appears under the resource, the database can be directly queried over the internet. So doing, you can obtain information about the age-of-acquisition, the degree of concreteness of a word, etc.

Regular expressions can be used. This means that you can make searches like
m[aou][dk]e
which means m followed by any of [a, o, u], followed by [d, k], followed by e.

Feedback on how to improve this resource to make it easier to use or better suit your needs is welcome (what is the kind of word search that you run most often?)

Letter-sound relationships in English

Choose Vowels or Consonants (one or two syllable words), then click on an association and you will get the list of all words that have a given letter(s)-sound association.

For instance, you can rapidly find out that they are two words that have a "a" pronounced like in yacht:

wrath rQT
yacht jQt
(at least according to official lexical databases)


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