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  2. Geoffrey Leech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Leech

    Geoffrey Neil Leech FBA (16 January 1936 – 19 August 2014) was a specialist in English language and linguistics. He was the author, co-author, or editor of more than 30 books and more than 120 published papers. [1] His main academic interests were English grammar, corpus linguistics, stylistics, pragmatics, and semantics.

  3. Associative meaning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Associative_meaning

    According to the semantic analysis of Geoffrey Leech, the associative meaning of an expression has to do with individual mental understandings of the speaker. They, in turn, can be broken up into five sub-types: connotative, collocative, social, affective and reflected (Mwihaki 2004).

  4. Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longman_Grammar_of_Spoken...

    ISBN 0-58-223725-4", Journal of English Linguistics 31/1, pp. 90–97 . Schmid, H.-J.: "Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English: Review of Douglas Biber, Stig Johannson, Geoffrey Leech, Susan Conrad and Edward Finegan, Pearson Education Limited, Harlow, 1999. xxviii+1204 pages", Journal of Pragmatics 35/8, 2003, pp. 1265–1269 .

  5. Treebank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treebank

    The term treebank was coined by linguist Geoffrey Leech in the 1980s, by analogy to other repositories such as a seedbank or bloodbank. [2] This is because both syntactic and semantic structure are commonly represented compositionally as a tree structure.

  6. A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Comprehensive_Grammar_of...

    In 1988, Rodney Huddleston published a very critical review. [3] He wrote: [T]here are some respects in which it is seriously flawed and disappointing. A number of quite basic categories and concepts do not seem to have been thought through with sufficient care; this results in a remarkable amount of unclarity and inconsistency in the analysis, and in the organization of the grammar.

  7. Foregrounding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foregrounding

    Koopman [15] gave subjects to read 1 of 3 versions of an excerpt from a literary novel about the loss of a child, the original version, a manipulated version "without imagery" and a version "without foregrounding." Results showed that readers who had read the "original" version showed higher empathy for people who are grieving than those who ...

  8. Semantic property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_property

    Semantic properties or meaning properties are those aspects of a linguistic unit, such as a morpheme, word, or sentence, that contribute to the meaning of that unit.Basic semantic properties include being meaningful or meaningless – for example, whether a given word is part of a language's lexicon with a generally understood meaning; polysemy, having multiple, typically related, meanings ...

  9. Politeness maxims - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politeness_maxims

    According to Geoffrey Leech, there is a politeness principle with conversational maxims similar to those formulated by Paul Grice. He lists six maxims: tact, generosity, approbation, modesty, agreement, and sympathy. The first and second form a pair, as do the third and the fourth.