English in Computer-Mediated Communication 2016
DOI: 10.1515/9783110490817-009
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Grammatical feature frequencies of English on Twitter in Finland

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…In addition to conceptual orality, Twitter is a typical CMC-outlet in terms of the ubiquity of 'expressive compensation' strategies (Androutsopoulos 2011) inserted to counterbalance the absence of intonation and gestural expression cues. Apart from obvious examples such as emoji, a recurrent example of expressive nonstandard orthography is the lengthening of a word by repeating one or more of its characters (as in wellllllllll), a feature that has been analysed as an affective discourse strategy (Bamann, Eisenstein, & Schnoebelen 2014;Coats 2016).…”
Section: Does Modern Prestige Boost the Diffusion Of Linguistic Featu...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In addition to conceptual orality, Twitter is a typical CMC-outlet in terms of the ubiquity of 'expressive compensation' strategies (Androutsopoulos 2011) inserted to counterbalance the absence of intonation and gestural expression cues. Apart from obvious examples such as emoji, a recurrent example of expressive nonstandard orthography is the lengthening of a word by repeating one or more of its characters (as in wellllllllll), a feature that has been analysed as an affective discourse strategy (Bamann, Eisenstein, & Schnoebelen 2014;Coats 2016).…”
Section: Does Modern Prestige Boost the Diffusion Of Linguistic Featu...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a computer-mediated communication (CMC) tool, to begin with, Twitter is characterised by ‘conceptual orality’ (Androutsopoulos 2011:149; Hilte, Vandekerckhove, & Daelemans 2018). Tweets imitate casual speech features, and they are littered with non-standard orthography which is either the result of error, or—more interestingly—of expressive or indexical resourcefulness (Coats 2016:188). Twitter shares with authentic colloquial speech the presence of phonetic, lexical, and morphosyntactic cues which systematically reveal identities and stances of tweeters.…”
Section: Social Meaning As a Driving-forcementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Souvent considérées comme des éléments paralinguistiques, les interjections ont été peu étudiées (Ameka, 1992). Une étude d'un corpus de tweets (Coats, 2017) met toutefois en évidence une association entre le genre et l'utilisation des interjections, celles-ci étant plus fréquemment utilisées par les femmes. D'autres études n'ont pas révélé de différence entre femmes et hommes (Guiller & Durndell, 2007), ou ont mis en lumière l'effet d'autres variables : dans un corpus de SMS et de tweets, elles sont plus fréquentes chez les adolescent•es que chez les jeunes adultes (Verheijen, 2017).…”
Section: Interjectionsunclassified
“…They also frequently use emoticons, which are generally used for informal conversations in chat. Emoticons are string of symbols representing body language in text-based communication [2] that are prevalent in certain genres of CMC, including Twitter [3]. Besides emoticons, Tirto.id also uses punctuation, but not in formal way.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%