A CORPUS-DRIVEN ANALYSIS OF LEXICAL BUNDLES IN MEDICAL RESEARCH ARTICLES WITH A VIEW TO EVALUATING EDITING EFFECTS
被引:1
作者:
Sattarpour, Simin
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Fac Allied Med Sci, Tabriz, IranTabriz Univ Med Sci, Fac Allied Med Sci, Tabriz, Iran
Sattarpour, Simin
[1
]
Hajizadeh, Negar
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Avrasya Univ, Fac Sci & Literature, Trabzon, TurkiyeTabriz Univ Med Sci, Fac Allied Med Sci, Tabriz, Iran
Hajizadeh, Negar
[2
]
Khalili, Assef
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Fac Allied Med Sci, Tabriz, Iran
Tabriz Univ, Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Fac Allied Med Sci, Dept Basic Sci, 29th Blvd, Tabriz, IranTabriz Univ Med Sci, Fac Allied Med Sci, Tabriz, Iran
Khalili, Assef
[1
,3
]
机构:
[1] Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Fac Allied Med Sci, Tabriz, Iran
[2] Avrasya Univ, Fac Sci & Literature, Trabzon, Turkiye
[3] Tabriz Univ, Tabriz Univ Med Sci, Fac Allied Med Sci, Dept Basic Sci, 29th Blvd, Tabriz, Iran
来源:
ESP TODAY-JOURNAL OF ENGLISH FOR SPECIFIC PURPOSES AT TERTIARY LEVEL
|
2024年
/
12卷
/
02期
关键词:
English for academic purposes (EAP);
lexical bundles;
editing;
academic writing;
corpus- based analysis;
medical research articles;
ENGLISH;
WRITERS;
L1;
PHRASEOLOGY;
LANGUAGE;
PATTERNS;
WRITTEN;
D O I:
10.18485/esptoday.2024.12.2.5
中图分类号:
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号:
030303 ;
0501 ;
050102 ;
摘要:
Lexical bundles (LBs), as building blocks of fluent academic language production, have been studied extensively, but less attention has been paid to non-native authors' productions. Nor has there been a study to investigate the possible changes that LBs might undergo in non-native authors' productions when submitted to copy editors. Therefore, a 914,666-word corpus was selected, encompassing both edited and unedited articles in medical sciences written by Persian academics. Then, we studied the frequency of 4-word bundles alongside their structural and functional features, as well as the changes the editing process could bring about in this regard. The results indicated that although types and tokens of bundles generally increased by 6.6% and 17.3% respectively after the editing process, this increase did not include all subcategories. Furthermore, the editing process was not found to make any tangible structural or functional modifications. Pedagogically, our findings could have implications for non-native authors and editors .