Institutionalized utterances, literature, and language teaching
Identifieur interne : 000F58 ( Main/Merge ); précédent : 000F57; suivant : 000F59Institutionalized utterances, literature, and language teaching
Auteurs : Ian Mackenzie [Suisse]Source :
- Language and Literature [ 0963-9470 ] ; 2000-02.
English descriptors
- Entity :
- org : India and the Finnish.
- pers : A. Sechehaye, Although, B.F. Skinner, Bakhtin, Barthes, C. Bally, Donald Swann, Franz Bopp, Gary Saul, George Orwell, Katerina Clark, Language, Linguists, Literature, Lord, Mark Powell, Michael Flanders, Michael Holquist, Morson, Orwell, Oscar Wilde, Pawley, Roger Fowler, Roland Barthes, Russo, S. Chatman, SAGE Publications, Syder, Volosinov, Wayne Carlson, Without.
- place : Britain, Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, On Westminster Bridge, Yugoslavia.
- Teeft :
- Bakhtin, Barthes, Basic unit, Chunk, Clarendon press, Cold fact, Dark matter, English language, English verse, Everyday language, Expressive inheritance, Familiar usage, Foreign language, Foreign language teaching, Formulaic language, Gary saul morson, George orwell, Grammatical, Grammatical form, Grammatical knowledge, Grammatical structure, Grammaticalized lexis, Great deal, Hard fact, High proportion, Homeric formula, Homeric poetry, Increase learner, Individual word, Language acquisition, Language teaching, Language teaching publication, Large number, Large proportion, Least transformation, Less euphonious, Lexical, Lexical approach, Lexical phrase, Lexicalized phrase, Linguistic competence, Linguistic performance, Literary author, Literary language, Mackenzie, Many other thing, Mathematical theory, More fare, Native language, Native speaker, Nativelike fluency, Oral epic poetry, Oral literature, Oral poetry, Oral singer, Oral source, Oral tradition, Ordinary language, Orwell, Other word, Oxford university press, Pawley, Phrase such, Readymade phrase, Recent work, Research parallel, River glideth, Same time, Sentence head, Several hundred, Show more fair, Single word, Sound group, Speech genre, Speech production, Syder, Texas press, Utterance, Verbal anomaly, Westminster bridge.
Abstract
Linguists have recently suggested that a large proportion of linguistic performance in naturally acquired languages is enabled by the internalization of a huge number of institutionalized utterances, or lexical phrases, or fixed and semi-fixed expressions. This research parallels the discovery, earlier this century, of the oral-formulaic nature of Homeric poetry. Furthermore, although written literature (as opposed to oral epic poetry) is generally assumed to be anything but formulaic, it can be shown that it too necessarily contains a lot of institutionalized expressions, or at least transformations of them, and that our own repertoire of memorized phrases almost certainly comes from literary as well as oral sources. Foreign language teachers clearly need to give serious consideration to the prevalence of lexical phrases, in both speech and writing. Literature can be used in the foreign language classroom as (among many other things) a source of institutionalized phrases.
Url:
DOI: 10.1177/096394700000900105
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ISTEX:607C26AEDB830B9208AED33B4934FCCF139DCECBLe document en format XML
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<term>English verse</term>
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<term>Expressive inheritance</term>
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<term>Foreign language</term>
<term>Foreign language teaching</term>
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<term>Grammatical structure</term>
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<term>Great deal</term>
<term>Hard fact</term>
<term>High proportion</term>
<term>Homeric formula</term>
<term>Homeric poetry</term>
<term>Increase learner</term>
<term>Individual word</term>
<term>Language acquisition</term>
<term>Language teaching</term>
<term>Language teaching publication</term>
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<term>Large proportion</term>
<term>Least transformation</term>
<term>Less euphonious</term>
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<term>Research parallel</term>
<term>River glideth</term>
<term>Same time</term>
<term>Sentence head</term>
<term>Several hundred</term>
<term>Show more fair</term>
<term>Single word</term>
<term>Sound group</term>
<term>Speech genre</term>
<term>Speech production</term>
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Linguists have recently suggested that a large proportion of linguistic performance in naturally acquired languages is enabled by the internalization of a huge number of institutionalized utterances, or lexical phrases, or fixed and semi-fixed expressions. This research parallels the discovery, earlier this century, of the oral-formulaic nature of Homeric poetry. Furthermore, although written literature (as opposed to oral epic poetry) is generally assumed to be anything but formulaic, it can be shown that it too necessarily contains a lot of institutionalized expressions, or at least transformations of them, and that our own repertoire of memorized phrases almost certainly comes from literary as well as oral sources. Foreign language teachers clearly need to give serious consideration to the prevalence of lexical phrases, in both speech and writing. Literature can be used in the foreign language classroom as (among many other things) a source of institutionalized phrases.</div>
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