This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressions use the same tactics for working out what they mean. The test items needed to be semantically opaque, used in an authentic context, and unknown to all participants. Ten obsolete expressions were selected from the historical novels of Georgette Heyer. First language English speakers and UK-resident classroom-taught learners of English as a foreign language were individually presented with the expressions in their original context, and asked to work out what they meant. Analysis of their comments revealed that the native speakers deployed significantly more context and analogy. The non-native speakers were much more likely than native speake...
Formulaic language represents a challenge to even the most proficient of language learners. Evidence...
Formulaic sequences such as idioms, collocations, and lexical bundles, which may be processed as hol...
Native speakers often ignore the limitless potential of language and stick to institutionalized form...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
Formulaic sequences constitute a large part of the language we speak. This group contains, for examp...
Formulaic language is widely recognized to be of central importance to fluent and idiomatic language...
An analysis of different dimensions of meaning available to a native speaker (though with some varia...
This paper investigates the formulaic English expression How about you? (and its variants And you? a...
Research suggests that the use of formulaic language is a key feature of fluent and ‘natural soundin...
Formulaic sequences are very frequently used in language as a preferred way to convey certain meanin...
Formulaic language represents a challenge to even the most proficient of language learners. Evidence...
Formulaic sequences such as idioms, collocations, and lexical bundles, which may be processed as hol...
Native speakers often ignore the limitless potential of language and stick to institutionalized form...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
This study examines whether native and non-native speakers faced with unfamiliar formulaic expressio...
Formulaic sequences constitute a large part of the language we speak. This group contains, for examp...
Formulaic language is widely recognized to be of central importance to fluent and idiomatic language...
An analysis of different dimensions of meaning available to a native speaker (though with some varia...
This paper investigates the formulaic English expression How about you? (and its variants And you? a...
Research suggests that the use of formulaic language is a key feature of fluent and ‘natural soundin...
Formulaic sequences are very frequently used in language as a preferred way to convey certain meanin...
Formulaic language represents a challenge to even the most proficient of language learners. Evidence...
Formulaic sequences such as idioms, collocations, and lexical bundles, which may be processed as hol...
Native speakers often ignore the limitless potential of language and stick to institutionalized form...