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The presented book studies the Future Progressive in contemporary British English. Although the investigation of its diachronic development and synchronic status has significantly increased in recent years, the will/shall + be -ing construction remains highly under-represented in the current body of research. This paper therefore builds on existing research and expands major theories in order to provide a deeper understanding of relevant discourse functions. To this end, an analysis of the British National Corpus (BNC) is conducted. The primary aim is to determine how will/shall + be -ing is…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The presented book studies the Future Progressive in contemporary British English. Although the investigation of its diachronic development and synchronic status has significantly increased in recent years, the will/shall + be -ing construction remains highly under-represented in the current body of research. This paper therefore builds on existing research and expands major theories in order to provide a deeper understanding of relevant discourse functions. To this end, an analysis of the British National Corpus (BNC) is conducted. The primary aim is to determine how will/shall + be -ing is used and distributed in different text types, especially spoken 'genres'. Moreover, the frequency with which each of the different types of will/shall + be -ing occurs is assessed and compared to other types of future tenses. In doing so, the paper explores the formal and semantic properties and tries to account for the functional sub-categories of the Future Progressive.
Autorenporträt
Frank Gächter, 1987 in Liechtenstein geboren, lebt in Vorarlberg im Westen Österreichs. Bereits während des Studiums der Anglistik und Romanistik an der Universität Wien fokussierte er sich auf den Bereich kontrastive Linguistik sowie Korpusanalyse. Seit 2018 arbeitet er als Lehrer am Bundesgymnasium Dornbirn.