This study investigates the use of lexical backchannels in the discourse of L2 English users sitting Trinity College London’s Graded Examinations in Spoken English (GESE). It is based on the Trinity Lancaster Corpus Sample and explores the language produced during the Discussion, Conversation and Interactive tasks of the language examinations by L2 English users from Chinese, Indian and Italian linguistic backgrounds, whose proficiency ranges from the B2 to C2 levels (i.e. high intermediate, advanced, expert) of the CEFR. The findings suggest that the L2 users with an Italian background and to a lesser extent those with a Chinese background often supported their examiners’ turns with items conveying uncertainty, while those with an Indian b...
This article presents a general account of the backchannel tendencies of native English speakers for...
This study investigates communication patterns of English learners in conversational interaction and...
This study determines the fine-grained bottom-up linguistic features involved in successful second l...
This study investigated backchannels, short verbal responses such as yeah, employed by Indonesian L2...
This study investigated backchannels, short verbal responses such as yeah, employed by Indonesian L2...
In this study, we investigated criterial discourse features in L2 writing through the use of recurre...
In this study, we investigated criterial discourse features in L2 writing through the use of recurre...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study examines the L2 acquisition of constraints on Eng...
AbstractIn order to investigate how learners’ L2 vocabulary develop in speeches and writings, the cu...
Since the era of globalisation, the language use of English speakers in international communication ...
The chapter sets out to analyze the usage of DMs by two groups of Italian learners of Chinese and co...
This study aims to exemplify how language teaching can benefit from learner corpus research (LCR). T...
We describe an exploratory study carried out within the University of Milan, Department of English t...
This chapter investigates how the context of acquisition, and more precisely the amount of naturalis...
To participate effectively in interaction, interlocutors should make use of various resources such a...
This article presents a general account of the backchannel tendencies of native English speakers for...
This study investigates communication patterns of English learners in conversational interaction and...
This study determines the fine-grained bottom-up linguistic features involved in successful second l...
This study investigated backchannels, short verbal responses such as yeah, employed by Indonesian L2...
This study investigated backchannels, short verbal responses such as yeah, employed by Indonesian L2...
In this study, we investigated criterial discourse features in L2 writing through the use of recurre...
In this study, we investigated criterial discourse features in L2 writing through the use of recurre...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study examines the L2 acquisition of constraints on Eng...
AbstractIn order to investigate how learners’ L2 vocabulary develop in speeches and writings, the cu...
Since the era of globalisation, the language use of English speakers in international communication ...
The chapter sets out to analyze the usage of DMs by two groups of Italian learners of Chinese and co...
This study aims to exemplify how language teaching can benefit from learner corpus research (LCR). T...
We describe an exploratory study carried out within the University of Milan, Department of English t...
This chapter investigates how the context of acquisition, and more precisely the amount of naturalis...
To participate effectively in interaction, interlocutors should make use of various resources such a...
This article presents a general account of the backchannel tendencies of native English speakers for...
This study investigates communication patterns of English learners in conversational interaction and...
This study determines the fine-grained bottom-up linguistic features involved in successful second l...