Contents: María José Luzón/Mari Carmen Campoy/María Del Mar Sánchez/Patricia Salazar: Spoken Corpora: New Perspectives in Oral Language Use and Teaching - Anna Mauranen: Investigating English as a Lingua Franca with a Spoken Corpus - Viviana Cortes/Eniko Csomay: Positioning Lexical Bundles in University Lectures - Nancy Drescher: A Multi-dimensional Examination of Spoken Language in U.S. Universities - Paula García: Pragmatics in Academic Contexts: A Spoken Corpus Study - Javier Pérez Guerra: «Am I more complex when I speak or when I write?» A Corpus-based Study on Linguistic Complexity in Spoken and Written Present-day English - Amalia Mendes/Maria Fernanda Bacelar Do Nascimiento: Grammaticalization Processes in a Spoken Portuguese Corpus: Space, Time and Discourse - Yukio Tono: The Roles of Oral L2 Learner Corpora in Language Teaching: The Case of the NICT JLE Corpus - John Osborne: Investigating L2 Fluency through Oral Learner Corpora - Winnie Cheng: «Sorry to Interrupt, but...» Pedagogical Implications of a Spoken Corpus - Sylvie de Cock: Routinized Building Blocks in Native Speaker and Learner Speech: Clausal Sequences in the Spotlight - Fiona Farr: Spoken Language Analysis as an Aid to Reflective Practice in Language Teacher Education: Using a Specialised Corpus to Establish a Generic Fingerprint.
The Editors: Mari Carmen Campoy is the Head of the English Studies Department at the Universitat Jaume I in Castelló, Spain. She is Senior Lecturer in English for Specific Purposes and is a member of LAELA (Lingüística Aplicada a l'Ensenyament de la Llengua Anglesa), a research group currently involved in research projects dealing with Second Language Acquisition. She is currently working in the area of Corpus Linguistics and its applications to the teaching of foreign languages. María José Luzón is Senior Lecturer in English for Specific Purposes at the University of Saragossa, Spain. She has a Ph.D. in English Philology and has published papers on academic and professional discourse and on language teaching and learning in the field of English for Specific Purposes in national and international journals. Her current research interests include corpus-based research of academic and professional discourse and the use of new technologies in English language teaching and learning.