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Collocations in Academic Language in German and Danish
Author(s) -
Irene Simonsen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
kalbotyra
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2029-8315
pISSN - 1392-1517
DOI - 10.15388/kalbotyra.2020.8
Subject(s) - linguistics , adjective , german , noun , word order , verb , danish , sketch , computer science , variation (astronomy) , british national corpus , artificial intelligence , philosophy , physics , algorithm , astrophysics
This study compares the collocational use of the different word forms of five roots of academic language in German and Danish, considered essential for the realization of obligatory moves in the academic abstract, namely *analy*, *untersuch*/*undersøg*, *method*/*metod*, *theor*/*teor* and *empiri*. The aim of the comparison is to uncover differences and similarities in the expert norm of the two languages in order to gain insights that may help to inform the teaching of German-speaking students who must learn written standard Danish as part of their studies in Denmark. The study places special emphasis on the topic of variation, since variation reflects interculturally different uses of language specifically and is a major theme in academic language in general. The frequency and distribution of the five roots as verb, noun and adjective are compared in the collocations: noun + verb, verb + noun, adjective + noun in a study of two corpora of 100 dissertation abstracts from each of the two languages (approx.145.000 tokens), using the Word Sketch function of the corpus tool Sketch Engine. The LogDice measure has been used to identify the collocations, and variation is operationalized as the type-token ratio, computed for each syntactic relation. The results show general differences between the two languages. The use of different collocations with word forms from the five word families is greater in academic language in German than in Danish, despite a very similar distribution of the collocations in the languages and despite higher frequencies in Danish.  The collocational use of the words in Danish therefore seems to be less varied and more restricted than in academic language in German.

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