
Spoken English on Computer
Transcription, Mark-Up and Application
Longman (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 18. May 1995
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-0-582-25021-5 (ISBN)
Description
This book has evolved from a Workshop on Computerized Speech Corpora, held at Lancaster University in 1993. It brings together the findings presented in a clear and coherent manner, focussing on the advantages and disadvantages of particular transcription or mark-up practice.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
421 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-582-25021-5 (9780582250215)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Geoffrey Leech | Greg Myers | Jenny Thomas
Spoken English on Computer
Transcription, Mark-Up and Application
Book
01/2017
Routledge
€215.41
Shipment within 10-20 days

Geoffrey Leech | Greg Myers | Jenny Thomas
Spoken English on Computer
Transcription, Mark-Up and Application
E-Book
09/2014
1st Edition
Routledge
€80.49
Available for download

Geoffrey Leech | Greg Myers | Jenny Thomas
Spoken English on Computer
Transcription, Mark-Up and Application
E-Book
09/2014
1st Edition
Routledge
€80.49
Available for download
Persons
Jenny Thomas, Geoffrey Leech, Greg Myers
Content
List of Acronyms
List of Contributors
Editor's General Introduction
Part A: Issues and Practices
Introduction
1. Principles and alternative systems in the transcription, coding and mark-up of spoken discourse
2. Theoretical issues: transcribing the untranscribable
3. Adequacy, user-friendliness, and practicality in transcribing
4. Whole-text analysis in computerised spoken discourse
5. The text encoding initiative: an overview
6. The approach of the Text Encoding Initiative to the encoding of spoken discourse
7. From theory to practice
Part B: Applications and More Specialised Uses
Introduction
8. Transcription, segmentation and analysis: corpora from the language-impaired
9. Corpora of disordered language
10. Discourse considerations in transcription and analysis
11. Code switching: a problem for transcription and text encoding
12. Linking prosodic transcription to the time dimension
13. Grammar tagging of the spoken part of the British National Corpus: a progress report
14. Publishing a spoken and written corpus on CD ROM: the HCRC Map Task Experience
Part C: Samples and Systems of Transcription
Introduction
15. The survey of English usage and the London-Lund Corpus:computerizing manual prosodic transcription. 16. The COBUILDSpoken Corpus: transcription conventions
17. Recycling an old corpus: converting the SEC into the MARSEC database
18. The International Corpus of English: mark up for spoken language
19. The BNC Spoken Corpus
20. The Bergen Corpus of London Teenager Language (COLT)
Bibliography references
Subject index
Index of Person's names.
List of Contributors
Editor's General Introduction
Part A: Issues and Practices
Introduction
1. Principles and alternative systems in the transcription, coding and mark-up of spoken discourse
2. Theoretical issues: transcribing the untranscribable
3. Adequacy, user-friendliness, and practicality in transcribing
4. Whole-text analysis in computerised spoken discourse
5. The text encoding initiative: an overview
6. The approach of the Text Encoding Initiative to the encoding of spoken discourse
7. From theory to practice
Part B: Applications and More Specialised Uses
Introduction
8. Transcription, segmentation and analysis: corpora from the language-impaired
9. Corpora of disordered language
10. Discourse considerations in transcription and analysis
11. Code switching: a problem for transcription and text encoding
12. Linking prosodic transcription to the time dimension
13. Grammar tagging of the spoken part of the British National Corpus: a progress report
14. Publishing a spoken and written corpus on CD ROM: the HCRC Map Task Experience
Part C: Samples and Systems of Transcription
Introduction
15. The survey of English usage and the London-Lund Corpus:computerizing manual prosodic transcription. 16. The COBUILDSpoken Corpus: transcription conventions
17. Recycling an old corpus: converting the SEC into the MARSEC database
18. The International Corpus of English: mark up for spoken language
19. The BNC Spoken Corpus
20. The Bergen Corpus of London Teenager Language (COLT)
Bibliography references
Subject index
Index of Person's names.