The high-frequency vocabulary of English has traditionally been thought to consist of the 2,000 most frequent word families, and low-frequency vocabulary as that beyond the 10,000 frequency level. This paper argues that these boundaries should be reassessed on pedagogic grounds. Based on a number of perspectives (including frequency and acquisition studies, the amount of vocabulary necessary for English usage, the range of graded readers, and dictionary defining vocabulary), we argue that high-frequency English vocabulary should include the most frequent 3,000 word families. We also propose that the low-frequency vocabulary boundary should be lowered to the 9,000 level, on the basis that 8–9,000 word families are sufficient to provide the l...
This article describes a new free extensive reading resource for learning the mid-frequency words of...
EAP teachers and course designers usually assume that learners have already mastered the most freque...
This study looks at how much input is needed to gain enough repetition of the 1st 9,000 words of Eng...
The high-frequency vocabulary of English has traditionally been thought to consist of the 2,000 most...
Vocabulary is a fundamental component of language use, and research repeatedly suggests the dominanc...
This paper examines how research on lexical threshold and lexical coverage relates to L2 proficiency...
Word frequency seems to be unknown for many teachers’ and possibly deemed not very important for voc...
This study aims to gain insights into which collocations to teach at which proficiency levels by ans...
Once seen as a neglected area, second language vocabulary research has come into its own in recent y...
Collocations, simply defined, are words that have a high frequency of co-occurrence (Biber et al., 1...
There is current research consensus that second language (L2) learners are able to adequately compre...
This two-part study investigates the word frequency of a total of 1296 vocabularies presented in the...
It is almost a century that Palmer (1937) first suggested about the significance of frequency in voc...
Knowledge of high-frequency vocabulary is essential to language fluency. However, there is more to k...
It is widely accepted that high-frequency vocabulary must be taught in ESL/EFL classrooms, and that ...
This article describes a new free extensive reading resource for learning the mid-frequency words of...
EAP teachers and course designers usually assume that learners have already mastered the most freque...
This study looks at how much input is needed to gain enough repetition of the 1st 9,000 words of Eng...
The high-frequency vocabulary of English has traditionally been thought to consist of the 2,000 most...
Vocabulary is a fundamental component of language use, and research repeatedly suggests the dominanc...
This paper examines how research on lexical threshold and lexical coverage relates to L2 proficiency...
Word frequency seems to be unknown for many teachers’ and possibly deemed not very important for voc...
This study aims to gain insights into which collocations to teach at which proficiency levels by ans...
Once seen as a neglected area, second language vocabulary research has come into its own in recent y...
Collocations, simply defined, are words that have a high frequency of co-occurrence (Biber et al., 1...
There is current research consensus that second language (L2) learners are able to adequately compre...
This two-part study investigates the word frequency of a total of 1296 vocabularies presented in the...
It is almost a century that Palmer (1937) first suggested about the significance of frequency in voc...
Knowledge of high-frequency vocabulary is essential to language fluency. However, there is more to k...
It is widely accepted that high-frequency vocabulary must be taught in ESL/EFL classrooms, and that ...
This article describes a new free extensive reading resource for learning the mid-frequency words of...
EAP teachers and course designers usually assume that learners have already mastered the most freque...
This study looks at how much input is needed to gain enough repetition of the 1st 9,000 words of Eng...