Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2010
This final chapter will reverse the procedure we have normally followed so far: the ‘bottom up’ methodology outlined in Chapter 2 (section 2.3). According to that methodology, the natural way for corpus linguistics to operate is to work from the identification and quantification of formal phenomena in texts towards the functional interpretation of the resulting findings. Our method in this chapter, however, is to begin with types of functional explanation, and to consider them in relation to the various formal phenomena they might explain. This will include gathering together the functional explanations we have (tentatively) offered here and there in various chapters, to see how far they lend support to one another. But focusing on function rather than form will also give us the opportunity to go beyond the limited set of grammatical topics covered up to now – verb categories and their constructions, plus one chapter on the noun phrase – and to touch on extra topics, such as negation, and extra levels of language, such as morphology and punctuation. Ultimately, of course, wherever possible, we would like to identify common motivations – rooted in discourse conventions, the sociolinguistic dynamic or even the general socio-cultural context of the late twentieth century – which may reveal unexpected relations between changes which we have so far discussed largely in isolation.
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