This is a study of the lexical effects on New Zealand English of the legal, social and economic changes brought about by the fourth Labour government and its successor during the decade from 1984 - 1994, during which period the New Zealand public sector was radically reformed. In order to carry out this study a corpus of approximately five million written words was compiled, consisting of three parallel sets of documents from four domains of use in the public sector. Chapter One provides the rationale for scoping the study both to this particular ten-year period and to the lexis of four particular government departments, namely The Treasury and the Ministries of Social Welfare, Health and Education. A review of previous related work in the ...
In New Zealand a peculiar language contact scenario has emerged from the mutual infl uence between t...
This paper combines a quantitative and qualitative analysis of a diachronic corpus of New Zealand ne...
This study investigates hybrid compound formation of Maori and English terms in present day New Zeal...
This is a study of the lexical effects on New Zealand English of the legal, social and economic chan...
This study examines the lexical contribution the harvesting of the marine environment has made to a ...
The article is devoted to the analysis of culturally marked collocations in the economic discourse o...
New Zealand English is most obviously marked from other varieties of English by its lexical borrowin...
In New Zealand a peculiar language contact scenario has emerged from the mutual influence between th...
In New Zealand a peculiar language contact scenario has emerged from the mutual influence between th...
New Zealand English (NZE) is the regional variety with the smallest number of speakers – about 3 mil...
When a linguistic form from one language is used in another language, such words are known as borrow...
Māori loanwords are uncontestably the most notable feature of New Zealand English (Gordon, 2005; Ma...
The article considers linguistic and extralinguistic reasons of Maori borrowings in New Zealand Engl...
Māori loanwords are a distinctive characteristic of New Zealand English (Deverson, 1991). A previous...
Shortly, the New Zealand Dictionary Centre will have a presence —http://www.vuw.ac.nz/lals/nzdc — on...
In New Zealand a peculiar language contact scenario has emerged from the mutual infl uence between t...
This paper combines a quantitative and qualitative analysis of a diachronic corpus of New Zealand ne...
This study investigates hybrid compound formation of Maori and English terms in present day New Zeal...
This is a study of the lexical effects on New Zealand English of the legal, social and economic chan...
This study examines the lexical contribution the harvesting of the marine environment has made to a ...
The article is devoted to the analysis of culturally marked collocations in the economic discourse o...
New Zealand English is most obviously marked from other varieties of English by its lexical borrowin...
In New Zealand a peculiar language contact scenario has emerged from the mutual influence between th...
In New Zealand a peculiar language contact scenario has emerged from the mutual influence between th...
New Zealand English (NZE) is the regional variety with the smallest number of speakers – about 3 mil...
When a linguistic form from one language is used in another language, such words are known as borrow...
Māori loanwords are uncontestably the most notable feature of New Zealand English (Gordon, 2005; Ma...
The article considers linguistic and extralinguistic reasons of Maori borrowings in New Zealand Engl...
Māori loanwords are a distinctive characteristic of New Zealand English (Deverson, 1991). A previous...
Shortly, the New Zealand Dictionary Centre will have a presence —http://www.vuw.ac.nz/lals/nzdc — on...
In New Zealand a peculiar language contact scenario has emerged from the mutual infl uence between t...
This paper combines a quantitative and qualitative analysis of a diachronic corpus of New Zealand ne...
This study investigates hybrid compound formation of Maori and English terms in present day New Zeal...