96,15 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Sofort lieferbar
payback
0 °P sammeln
  • Gebundenes Buch

This volume aims to provide information about and interpretations of the concept of evidentiality lexically realized with certain verbs and applied to the genre of medical posters. More specifically, issues relating to how knowledge is conveyed through language will be discussed and how evidence for such knowledge is linguistically transmitted in a set of specialised texts. This study uses some of the possibilities offered by electronic corpora in conjunction with concordance tools, which allow quantitative analysis. Thanks to this quantitative analysis, followed by a qualitative…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This volume aims to provide information about and interpretations of the concept of evidentiality lexically realized with certain verbs and applied to the genre of medical posters. More specifically, issues relating to how knowledge is conveyed through language will be discussed and how evidence for such knowledge is linguistically transmitted in a set of specialised texts. This study uses some of the possibilities offered by electronic corpora in conjunction with concordance tools, which allow quantitative analysis. Thanks to this quantitative analysis, followed by a qualitative interpretation of the findings, we could detect the pragmatic function these evidential items have in contextual use, allowing us to see that evidentiality in medical discourse is intended in a slightly different way from general discourse.
Autorenporträt
Stefania M. Maci is a full professor of English language and translation in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Communication at the University of Bergamo. She has completed her PhD in applied linguistics, Lancaster University, UK. She has been the local supervisor and coordinator of local, national and international research projects (on academic genres). Her research areas include pragmatics, discourse analysis and genre analysis with a corpus linguistics approach, with particular regards to specialised (academic, medical and tourism) discourses and their popularization.