Title: Analysing and teaching meaning (3)
1 Analysing and teaching meaning (3)
- SSIS Lazio - Lesson 3
- prof. Hugo Bowles
- January 2007
2Lesson 3 - part 1
- Dictionaries and other resources
3The Criteria of a Dictionary
- Formal Criteria
- A list of the headwords (entries)
- Information about each headword
- Functional Criteria
- A reference work (to provide information about
difficult technical words) - A storeroom for a language (to find out what once
existed and what exists today) - A code of law (to decide whether to accept or
reject regional, historical or social variants).
4Criteria regarding content
- Spelling
- Lexical meaning
- Word class
- Pronunciation
- Stress
- Etymology
- Collocations etc.
5The history of English Dictionaries
- 1604 A Table Alphabetical Robert Cawdrey (2,500
words) - 1616 English Expositor John Bullokar
- 1623 English Dictionarie Henry Cockeram
- 1656 New World of English Words Edward Phillips
- 1702 A New English Dictionary John Kersey
(28,000 words) - 1721 Universal Etymological English Dictionary
Nathaniel Bailey (40,000 words)
6- Dictionary of the English
- Language
- 1755
- by Samuel Johnson
- Two volumes
- 40,000 entries
7- An American Dictionary of the English Language
- 1828
- by Noah Webster
- Two volumes
- 70,000 entries
8Oxford, Longman, and Collins
- 1928 Oxford English Dictionary (12 volumes,
15,487 pp., 252,200 entries) - 1968 Longmans English Larousse
- 1987 Collins Cobuild English Language Dictionary
9The Corpus Revolution Word-watching ? Compiling
a corpus
- Corpus A collection of written or spoken
materials. - The sources magazine articles, brochures,
newspapers, lectures, sermons, broadcasts,
chapters on novels, etc.
10The Survey of English Usage
- The first large corpus of English-language data,
compiled in the 1960s. - Directed by Randolph Quirk
- Based at University College London
- It consists of 1,000,000 words taken from 200
texts of spoken and written materials. - The texts were transcribed by hand and stored on
index cards. - In the 1970s the spoken component was made
electronically available by Jan Svartvik of Lund
University
11Some important corpora
- The first computerized corpus the Brown
University Corpus of American English,
Providence, Rhode Island, USA, in 1960s. - The LancasterOlso/Bergen (LOB) Corpus of British
English, in 1970s. - CollinsBirmingham University International
Language Database (COBUILD), in 1980s. The corpus
reached 20 million words. - Longman/Lancaster English Language Corpus, in
1980s, using both American and British English,
comprises 30 million words. - Bank of English (Birmingham University), started
in 1991 and reached 450 million words in 2002.
12The British National Corpus (BNC)
- A collaboration between Longman, Oxford
University Press, Chambers Harrap (Oxford
University Computing Service), The University of
Lancaster, and the British Library. - Compilation from 1991 until 1994 100 million
words. Particular attention has been paid to the
internal balance of the corpus.
13The International Corpus of English
- Based at the University College London
- Began in 1980s
- By 1991, 20 countries agreed to take part
- Australia, Cameroon, Canada, Caribbean, Fiji,
Ghana, Hong Kong, India, Ireland, Kenya, Malawi,
New Zealand, Nigeria, Philippines, Sierra Leone,
Singapore, South Africa, Tanzania, UK, and USA.
14Types of dictionary (1)
- Standard monolingual
- Learners monolingual (usuall with pictures
andstudy guides) - Thesaurus
- Oxford, Longman, Chambers, Webster
- Oxford Advanced Learners, Cambridge
International, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary
English - Roget, Longman Lexicon
15Types of dictionary (2)
- Bilingual (with translation)
- Concept dictionaries
- Thematic dictionaries (cuture, quotations)
- Technical dictionaries
- Zanichelli, Garzanti ecc.
- Cambridge Wordroutes, Word Activators
16Dictionary formats
- Book form - pocket/full-size
- Online
- CD-ROM
17Other sources of lexical information
- Concordances
- Glossaries
- Parallel texts
18Learners dictionary - advantages
- More information
- - lexical, collocational, grammatical,
- pronunciation
- Better information
- - based on language corpora of English in
- use
- Better learning
- - written in English
19Learners dictionary - disadvantages
- No translation
- Very few technical words
20Bilingual dictionary - advantages and
disadvantages
- ADVANTAGES
- gives a quick translation
- can give a quick
- understanding
- DISADVANTAGES
- can give a quick misunderstanding
- doesnt help learning processes
21Collocation dictionaries, concordances and
glossaries
- The advantage of a collocation dictionary is to
find collocations which are not availablee in a
dictionary - A concordance from a corpus can also be used to
find collocations or new ways of expressing a
concept - Glossaries are compiled and used by specialists
and are only useful for translation students
working on advanced lexis
22Some advice
- Choose a learners dictionary which really helps
your students lexical problems and which you
like using as a teacher - A good bilingual dictionary is also extremely
useful but make sure you use it for translation
only
23Lesson 3 - part 2
- Using resources and materials with students
-
24Knowing the meaning of a word - what it implies
for students
- Decoding and recognising the form
- Understanding the meaning
- Remembering the word
- Producing the word
- Using the word
251. Decoding and recognising the form
- Read and relate written form to spoken form
- Listen to and identify a word
- Morphological understanding of roots and affixes
(word-formation)
262. Understanding the meaning
- what the word refers to
- the connotation of the word
- the style and register of the word
- its discourse function
273. Remembering the word
- Meaning (receptive)
- Form (productive)
284. Producing the word
- Spoken form (pronunciation)
- Written form (spelling)
295. Using the word
- Accurately (grammar, syntax)
- Appropriately (style register, collocation)
30Using a dictionary for reading
- Look at the context of the word
- Use the context to decide on the grammar of the
word (is it a verb/noun? - Use the context to make a hypothesis about the
meaning - Use the dictionary to check your hypothesis
31Using a dictionary for speaking
- Know the phonetic alphabet (i.e. you need to be
able to produce the sound of the symbol) - Look up the phonetic spelling of a word
- Produce the sound of the word by reading the
phonetic spelling or by listening to/repeating
the sound (CD/online dictionaries) - Practice the word in isolation and in a stream of
speech
32Post-dictionary work
- You need a system to help students record
- and remember words
- Alphabetical order
- Word maps
- Words organised by topics
- Different types of list (idioms, phonetic lists
of words with same sound) - Lists with translations
33Dictionaries
- See the list and analysis of dictionaries and
software in the article on lexicography