The Australian Corpus of English (ACE)
Utvidet metadata
- resource Common Info
- resource Type: corpus
- identification Info
- resource Name: The Australian Corpus of English (ACE)
- description: ACE is the first systematically compiled heterogeneous corpus in Australia, designed to support a variety of linguistic research. Interest in the differentiation between Australian, British and American English meant that a corpus modeled on the Brown and LOB corpora would provide ready comparisons. It would also serve as a strategic sample of current Australian English, and as a reference corpus for comparisons with more specialised, homogeneous corpora in Australia. ACE matches the Brown and LOB corpora in most aspects of its structure and constituency, so that direct interdialectal comparisons can be made on a comparable range of printed genres. Yet the desire to create an up-to-date corpus of Australian English prompted the decision not to match Brown and LOB chronologically, ie. with data drawn from publications of the early 1960s. Instead, ACE consists of material from 1986. A time difference is therefore inherent in any regional intercomparisons with Brown and LOB, though that may itself be of considerable interest in showing the direction of influence in the latter part of this century. The twenty-five year difference in fact allowed us to match rather more categories of publishing than would have been possible had we attempted to create a retrospective corpus of Australian publications of the 60s (as LOB did). Independent southern hemisphere publishing has increased steadily since World War II, yet even in 1986 the range of locally published novels was limited and insufficient for the quota required by the Brown/LOB model. It was topped up with a higher proportion of extracts from short stories than were used in the model corpora.
- resource Short Name: ACE
- url: http://clarino.uib.no/korpuskel/landing-page?identifier=ace&view=short
- P I D: hdl:11495/DF2E-8B1D-C210-1
- distribution Info
- licence Info
- user Category: Academic
- distribution Access Medium: webExecutable
- distribution Access Medium: downloadable
- download Location: http://clarino.uib.no/korpuskel/page
- execution Location: http://clarino.uib.no/korpuskel/page
- attribution Text: Collins, P. and Peters, P. The Australian corpus project in Corpus linguistics, hard and soft, ed. M Kyto et al. Amsterdam: Rodopi (1988), 103-120.
- licence
- licence Family: CLARIN
- licence Name: CLARIN_ACA
- conditions Of Use: BY
- conditions Of Use: NC
- conditions Of Use: ID
- conditions Of Use: NORED
- licensor:
- actor Info
- actor Type: organization
- role: licensor
- organization Info
- organization Name: University of Bergen
- organization Short Name: UiB
- organization Short Name: UoB
- department Name: CLARINO project
- communication Info
- email: clarin@uib.no
- distribution Rights Holder
- actor Info
- actor Type: organization
- role: distributionRightsHolder
- organization Info
- organization Name: University of Bergen
- organization Short Name: UiB
- organization Short Name: UoB
- department Name: CLARINO project
- communication Info
- email: clarin@uib.no
- actor Info
- licence Info
- ipr Holder
- actor Info
- actor Type: person
- role: resourceCreator
- person Info
- surname: Peters
- given Name: Pam
- sex: female
- affiliation:
- organization Info
- organization Name: Macquaire University, Sydney, Australia
- department Name: Linguistics
- actor Info
- actor Info
- actor Type: person
- role: contact
- person Info
- surname: Hofland
- given Name: Knut
- sex: male
- birth Year: 1950
- position: Fagkonsulent / Specialist Consultant
- affiliation:
- organization Info
- organization Name: Uni Research AS
- department Name: Uni Research Computing
- organization Info
- organization Name: Uni Research AS
- department Name: Uni Research Computing
- communication Info
- email: knut.hofland@uni.no
- url: http://uni.no/nb/staff/directory/knut-hofland/
- address: Thormøhlensgate 55
- zip Code: 5008
- city: Bergen
- country: Norway
- telephone Number: +47 5558 9463
- metadata Creation Date: 26.05.2015
- metadata Last Date Updated: 27.08.2018
- metadata Creator
- actor Info
- actor Type: person
- role: metadataCreator
- person Info
- surname: Hofland
- given Name: Knut
- sex: male
- birth Year: 1950
- position: Fagkonsulent / Specialist Consultant
- affiliation:
- organization Info
- organization Name: Uni Research AS
- department Name: Uni Research Computing
- organization Info
- organization Name: Uni Research AS
- department Name: Uni Research Computing
- communication Info
- email: knut.hofland@uni.no
- url: http://uni.no/nb/staff/directory/knut-hofland/
- address: Thormøhlensgate 55
- zip Code: 5008
- city: Bergen
- country: Norway
- telephone Number: +47 5558 9463
- actor Info
- documentation Unstructured
- role: documentation
- document Unstructured: MANUAL OF INFORMATION TO ACCOMPANY THE AUSTRALIAN CORPUS OF ENGLISH (ACE) MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY BY PAM PETERS WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF ADAM SMITH http://clu.uni.no/icame/manuals/ACE/INDEX.HTM
- corpus Info
- corpus Type: Written Corpus
dc:type | corpus |
dc:title | The Australian Corpus of English (ACE) |
dc:identifier | oai:clarino.uib.no:ace |
dc:description | ACE is the first systematically compiled heterogeneous corpus in Australia, designed to support a variety of linguistic research. Interest in the differentiation between Australian, British and American English meant that a corpus modeled on the Brown and LOB corpora would provide ready comparisons. It would also serve as a strategic sample of current Australian English, and as a reference corpus for comparisons with more specialised, homogeneous corpora in Australia. ACE matches the Brown and LOB corpora in most aspects of its structure and constituency, so that direct interdialectal comparisons can be made on a comparable range of printed genres. Yet the desire to create an up-to-date corpus of Australian English prompted the decision not to match Brown and LOB chronologically, ie. with data drawn from publications of the early 1960s. Instead, ACE consists of material from 1986. A time difference is therefore inherent in any regional intercomparisons with Brown and LOB, though that may itself be of considerable interest in showing the direction of influence in the latter part of this century. The twenty-five year difference in fact allowed us to match rather more categories of publishing than would have been possible had we attempted to create a retrospective corpus of Australian publications of the 60s (as LOB did). Independent southern hemisphere publishing has increased steadily since World War II, yet even in 1986 the range of locally published novels was limited and insufficient for the quota required by the Brown/LOB model. It was topped up with a higher proportion of extracts from short stories than were used in the model corpora. |
dc:publisher | |
dc:format | webExecutable |
dc:date | |
dc:date | |
dc:rights | Academic |
dc:rights | CLARIN |
dc:rights | CLARIN_ACA |
dc:rights |