Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
360430 Journal of English for Academic Purposes 2010 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

A key concern for writers is the creation of cohesion in a text, and writers are told by style manuals to avoid the use of demonstratives (this, that, these, those) as pronouns in order to maintain cohesion. However, previous corpus-based investigations have already revealed that authors of academic texts use demonstratives as both determiners and pronouns. Using a corpus of academic research articles in Education and Sociology, I investigate the extended linguistic environments in which the demonstratives this and these are used with the goal of understanding how expert writers employ demonstratives as pronouns and determiners to create cohesion. The results of the study indicate that pronominal uses of this/these most overwhelmingly refer to antecedents that are complete clauses (but not extended discourse that spans sentence boundaries). When the demonstratives are followed by a noun, shell nouns and abstract nouns are used most of the time. Shell nouns, in contrast to other abstract nouns, most often refer to antecedents that are complete clauses or that are extended, meaning that the antecedent spans sentence boundaries. The implications of these results for teaching academic writing are discussed.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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