Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/116089
Title: Elastic language in scientific writing: Evidence from the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts
Authors: Álvarez Gil, Francisco J. 
Quintana Toledo, Elena 
UNESCO Clasification: 5701 Lingüística aplicada
5702 Lingüística diacrónica
Keywords: Vagueness
Elastic language
Approximate stretcher
General stretcher
Scalar stretcher, et al
Issue Date: 2022
Journal: Moderna Sprak 
Abstract: This paper sets out to explore the expression of vagueness in eighteenth and nineteenth century scientific writing, specifically in the Corpus of English Life Sciences Texts. Following Zhang’s (2015) pragmatic-oriented approach to vague language, vague expressions are viewed through the lenses of elasticity. This notion applies to the strategic use of vagueness insofar as it provides a space for the negotiation of pragmatic meanings in writer-reader interaction. The exploration of elastic language involves four lexical categories: (i) approximate stretchers, i.e., approximators and vague quantifiers, (ii) general stretchers, i.e., general terms, placeholders and vague category markers, (iii) scalar stretchers, i.e., intensifiers and softeners, and (iv) epistemic stretchers. The Coruña Corpus Tool has been used to elicit data, but classification and contextualised interpretations have necessarily relied on manual analysis. Findings reveal that elastic language fulfils a variety of relational functions in scientific writing, including making generalisations when the information is either not available or relevant for the purposes of communication, marking shared knowledge and group membership, or self-protection.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/116089
ISSN: 0026-8577
Source: Moderna Sprak [ISSN 0026-8577], v. 116 (1), p. 217-244, (2022)
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