between speaking and writing. For example, the forms
no one and
nobody are, on
the face of it, synonymous, yet their distribution across five million words each of
spoken and written data is very different, with nobody greatly preferred in the
spoken corpus, as shown below.
Use of no one and nobody in spoken and written English
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
no one
nobody
The interpretation of such statistics then depends on a more qualitative
interpretation of the data, observing how nobody tends to correlate with the more
informal end of the spectrum. A similar pattern of usage, in this case more clearly
related to formality, can be seen for who and whom, where whom is shown to be
relatively rare in conversation, only occurring in more formal contexts.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: