学术命名:研究写作中名词使用模式的变化

IF 0.9 2区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Journal of English Linguistics Pub Date : 2021-06-09 DOI:10.1177/00754242211019080
Ken Hyland, F. Jiang
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引用次数: 7

摘要

在这篇论文中,我们探讨了学术界将过程命名为事物的方式,以及这些做法在过去五十年中是如何变化的。专注于名词化、名词-名词序列和首字母缩略词,我们记录了四个学科的一组一致期刊中220万个单词的语料库中这些特征的增加。我们的研究结果表明,名词化和首字母缩略词在所有四个领域都有所增加,特别是在应用语言学和社会学领域,虽然名词-名词序列在电气工程领域有所下降,但在其他学科,尤其是社会学领域有所上升。我们还认为,名词-名词短语越来越多地用于命名方法论方法,而不是概念或对象,我们试图解释这些变化。我们观察到,命名的这些增加与现代研究写作中对简洁性的需求以及赋予命名对象真实存在的优势有关,从而可以被认为具有解释权威。然而,我们质疑这些实践在社会科学中的解释是否恰当。
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Academic Naming: Changing Patterns of Noun Use in Research Writing
In this paper we explore the ways academics name processes as things and how these practices have changed over the past fifty years. Focusing on nominalization, noun-noun sequences, and acronyms, we document an increase in these features across a corpus of 2.2 million words within a consistent set of journals from four disciplines. Our results show that nominalizations and acronyms have increased in all four fields, particularly in applied linguistics and sociology, and that while noun-noun sequences have fallen in electrical engineering, they have risen in the other disciplines, especially sociology. We also suggest that noun-noun phrases have increasingly come to name methodological approaches, rather than concepts or objects, and we seek to account for these changes. We observe that these increases in naming are related to the need for succinctness in modern research writing and the advantages of endowing named objects with a real existence which can then be credited with explanatory authority. We question, however, the appropriacy of these practices for interpretation in the social sciences.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: Journal of English Linguistics: The Editor invites submissions on the modern and historical periods of the English language. JEngL normally publishes synchronic and diachronic studies on subjects from Old and Middle English to modern English grammar, corpus linguistics, and dialectology. Other topics such as language contact, pidgins/creoles, or stylistics, are acceptable if the article focuses on the English language. Articless normally range from ten to twenty-five pages in typescript. JEngL reviews titles in general and historical linguistics, language variation, socio-linguistics, and dialectology for an international audience. Unsolicited reviews cannot be considered. Books for review and correspondence regarding reviews should be sent to the Editor.
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