Title of article :
A Corpus-based Analysis of Epistemic Stance Adverbs in Essays Written by Native English Speakers and Iranian EFL Learners
Author/Authors :
Sabzevar, Amir Department of English - Islamic Azad University Isfahan (Khorasgan) Branch Isfahan, Iran , Haghverdi, Hamidreza Department of English - Islamic Azad University Isfahan (Khorasgan) Branch Isfahan, Iran , Biriya, Reza Department of English - Islamic Azad University Isfahan (Khorasgan) Branch Isfahan, Iran
Abstract :
Academic essays entail taking a stance on the truth value of propositions.
Epistemic adverbs deal with the speaker's assessment of the truth value of
propositions. Employing a corpus-based approach with descriptive statistics
and qualitative description, this study explored the use of epistemic stance
adverbs in academic essays written by native English speakers and Iranian
EFL learners. Following Biber et al.'s (1999) framework of stance adverbials,
the researchers employed a corpus of 62077 words taken from class
assignments written by Iranian EFL learners and a corpus of 65268 words
taken from British Academic Written English (BAWE) to investigate the use
of epistemic stance adverbs. Antconc software 3.4.3 version was used to
search the most frequent stance adverbs. Frequency counts for each of the
adverbs were extracted and normalized per 1000 words; then, Chi-square was
run to pinpoint any differences between the two groups. The findings revealed
both similarities and differences in the use of stance adverbs between the two
groups. For example, EFL writers used more confident adverbs to show their
authorial presence while native speakers used more maybe adverbs which are
less authority-oriented. The findings may have implications for second/foreign
language learners and writing instruction.
Keywords :
academic essay , BAWE , corpus analysis , EFL learners , epistemic adverbs , stance
Journal title :
The Journal of English Language Pedagogy and Paractice