<i>Such</i> and <i>sådan</i> – the same but different
Author(s) -
Johan van der Auwera,
Evie Coussé
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
nordic journal of english studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.18
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1654-6970
pISSN - 1502-7694
DOI - 10.35360/njes.374
Subject(s) - political science , english language , field (mathematics) , humanities , library science , media studies , sociology , linguistics , philosophy , computer science , mathematics , pure mathematics
English such has a variety of uses, which nearly always involve the expression of similarity, and such can therefore be called a ʻsimilativeʼ. Swedish sadan has very similar uses. However, the two similatives differ strongly with respect to the frequency of some of these uses. Thus such, different from sadan, rarely functions as a noun or pronoun, compared to sadan it more frequently exhibits the so-called ʻintensifying useʼ and it has more competition from constructions with like, sort and kind (sort, typ in Swedish). The study uses three methods: (i) non-corpus analysis based on intuition, scrutiny of existing scholarship and google searches, (ii) analyis of comparable corpora, and (iii) analysis of parallel corpora.
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