24
effective in prompting investigation of the voices in the text. It should
also be borne in mind that there is no reason why these issues
cannot be
raised with students whose command of writing and/or English is not as
advanced: they would fit in very well, for example, with the genre-based
approach to the teaching of writing in schools pioneered by Martin (e.g.
1985) and his colleagues.
(AL4/ Discussion)
As the results of the quantitative analysis (Table 1-4) show,
the majority of distal
demonstratives used in the
Applied Linguistics
corpus (77.4% of the occurrences
of
that
and 83.9% of the occurrences of
those
) have a pronominal function. In
the majority of cases the pronouns
those
and
that
are used cataphorically with a
post-modifying clause or prepositional phrase which
makes their reference more
precise (13). These uses of demonstrative pronouns create cohesive links at the
intrasentential level and thus pertain to the local discourse level.
(12)
Though this suggests that proficiency is not necessarily reflected in
surface complexity of language, it is still valid to suppose that more
proficient speakers are those who are able to keep track of where they
are
, syntactically, as they incorporate fully or partially fixed sequences
with language freshly minted for the occasion.
(AL1/ Introduction)
Similarly to proximal demonstratives, the rather infrequent uses of
that
and
those
as determiners co-occur with deictic and shell nouns and create local
cohesive relations. As (13) shows, however, while
this
and
these
are used to refer
to the current study and the phenomena and approaches
which are central to it,
the distal demonstrative determiner
that
refers to a previous study cited in the
article.
(13)
We extended
this research approach
in the Longman Grammar of Spoken
and Written English (Biber et al. 1999, ch. 13; see also Biber and Conrad
1999), referring to these recurrent sequences of words as ‘lexical bundles’
(see section 2 below). That study used corpus-based research methods
to compare the most common multi-word units in spoken and written
registers.
(AL7/ Method)
When
used with shell nouns, distal demonstratives can show disagreement
with the findings, views and positions to which they refer (14).
(14)
The problem […] appears when researchers compare speakers from
different socio-economic classes and (in some contexts) ethnic groups.
If this variation arose from innate differences in verbal ability, then
25
presumably it would be logical to conclude that such differences exist not
only between men and women, but also between middle-class and working-
class speakers or white and non-white ones. It is not only linguists who
would find that conclusion unpalatable. Most new biologists emphasize
that they do not share the preoccupations with race and class which
brought some of their predecessors into disrepute.
(AL12/ Discussion)
This analysis of cohesive relations established by demonstratives indicates
that both distal and proximal demonstrative pronouns establish local cohesive
links. When
used as determiners, distal demonstratives partake in the construal
of local cohesion, while the proximal demonstrative
this
can
create cohesive
links both at the local and global discourse level.
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