Spoken texts provide a large quantity of information which extends beyond language; they include semiotic resources such as gesture, posture, gaze and facial expressions which, like language, contribute to the overall meaning-making of the texts (Kress and van Leeuwen 2006: 41). However, until recently their investigation has completely relied on their 'basic' orthographic transcriptions (Leech 2000), partly due to the lack of adequate concordancing software tools. This has somewhat limited the potential spoken texts bring to language teaching and learning. Based on the theoretical and technical innovations which have taken place in the field of multimodal corpus linguistics (Baldry and Thibault 2001, 2006b, forthcoming), especially within ...