I will write about: Investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.

Multiword expressions are a contiguous series of words in a text. This study examines the phraseological profile based on multiword expressions in argumentative writings in a 120,000-word collection of nonnative prospective university students' writing. The profile is compared with two sets of...

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Main Authors: Daehyeon Nam, Kwanghyun Park
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242843
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spelling doaj-1c91d549e36b4e5db48e7d622a9f241a2021-03-04T12:48:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011512e024284310.1371/journal.pone.0242843I will write about: Investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.Daehyeon NamKwanghyun ParkMultiword expressions are a contiguous series of words in a text. This study examines the phraseological profile based on multiword expressions in argumentative writings in a 120,000-word collection of nonnative prospective university students' writing. The profile is compared with two sets of American university students' writing from two corpora that comprise upper-level American university students' course papers and argumentative essay texts. The data are investigated both quantitatively and qualitatively in terms of the structure (i.e., noun, verb, and prepositional phrases) and function (i.e., stance, referential, and text organizer). The results show some noticeable differences among these sets of writing. The Korean student writers heavily relied on verb phrase-based expressions (e.g., are a lot of) in their writing whereas the American students preferred noun phrases. Functionally, the Korean writers underused referential function expressions (e.g., the idea of the) compared to their counterparts. In addition, the prospective Korean university students' writing was found to represent the widest range of multiword expressions whereas the American students' argumentative course papers exhibited the smallest range. The findings suggest that prospective Korean university students' writing tends to use more features of verbal conversation while American university students' writing exhibits features of structured argumentative writing. The implications for teaching writing and limitations of the study are discussed.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242843
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daehyeon Nam
Kwanghyun Park
spellingShingle Daehyeon Nam
Kwanghyun Park
I will write about: Investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Daehyeon Nam
Kwanghyun Park
author_sort Daehyeon Nam
title I will write about: Investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.
title_short I will write about: Investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.
title_full I will write about: Investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.
title_fullStr I will write about: Investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.
title_full_unstemmed I will write about: Investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.
title_sort i will write about: investigating multiword expressions in prospective students' argumentative writing.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Multiword expressions are a contiguous series of words in a text. This study examines the phraseological profile based on multiword expressions in argumentative writings in a 120,000-word collection of nonnative prospective university students' writing. The profile is compared with two sets of American university students' writing from two corpora that comprise upper-level American university students' course papers and argumentative essay texts. The data are investigated both quantitatively and qualitatively in terms of the structure (i.e., noun, verb, and prepositional phrases) and function (i.e., stance, referential, and text organizer). The results show some noticeable differences among these sets of writing. The Korean student writers heavily relied on verb phrase-based expressions (e.g., are a lot of) in their writing whereas the American students preferred noun phrases. Functionally, the Korean writers underused referential function expressions (e.g., the idea of the) compared to their counterparts. In addition, the prospective Korean university students' writing was found to represent the widest range of multiword expressions whereas the American students' argumentative course papers exhibited the smallest range. The findings suggest that prospective Korean university students' writing tends to use more features of verbal conversation while American university students' writing exhibits features of structured argumentative writing. The implications for teaching writing and limitations of the study are discussed.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242843
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