Plenty Too Much Chinese Food: Variation in Adjective and Intensifier Choice in Native and Non'native Speakers of English - Robert Dunn - Libros - LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing - 9783659190308 - 19 de julio de 2012
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Plenty Too Much Chinese Food: Variation in Adjective and Intensifier Choice in Native and Non'native Speakers of English

Robert Dunn

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Plenty Too Much Chinese Food: Variation in Adjective and Intensifier Choice in Native and Non'native Speakers of English

Adjective use and intensification by native speakers of English has been the subject of much study, yet intensification strategies used by non-native speakers have received less attention. This study compares adjective use by native English speakers with that of English L2 speakers at Kansas State University in order to describe how learner patterns of use differ from those of native speakers living in the same community. Interestingly, the L2 speakers intensify their adjectives at a higher rate than native speakers, while employing smaller sets of both adjectives and intensifiers. The types of adjectives used by the two groups differed in significant ways, with native speakers using more precise, contextually-specific evaluative adjectives such as 'crappy', 'elite', 'retarded', and 'obsessed', while non-native speakers used more generic adjectives such as 'happy', 'nice', 'long', and 'famous'. Data also show differences in intensifier preference between native and non-native speakers of English.

Medios de comunicación Libros     Paperback Book   (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado)
Publicado 19 de julio de 2012
ISBN13 9783659190308
Editores LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
Páginas 64
Dimensiones 150 × 4 × 226 mm   ·   104 g
Lengua English  

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