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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      March 2024
      March 2024
      ISBN:
      9781108560627
      9781108428668
      Dimensions:
      (229 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.67kg, 356 Pages
      Dimensions:
      Weight & Pages:
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    Book description

    The development of intensifiers has long been identified as an area of vibrant change in Late Modern English. This groundbreaking book provides the first comprehensive study of intensifiers in this period, and shows how they have changed over time. It uses speech-based and interactive data from the Old Bailey courthouse in London, enriched by extralinguistic information in the Old Bailey Corpus, to investigate an unprecedented range of intensifiers, including downtoners, boosters, and maximizers. The courtroom acts as a social microcosm of the period, providing unique insights on gender, class, and courtroom roles, and their effects on language use. The usage of intensifiers is illuminated from a lexico-grammatical angle, focusing on their formal and semantic features, as well as those of the items they modify. These perspectives are linked to temporal developments from 1720 to 1913, to offer a complete picture of variation and change in the intensifier area.

    Reviews

    ‘This book is a gem. A remarkably rigorous and systematic treatment of intensifiers in Late Modern English (focussing on the Old Bailey Corpus), it travels the whole gamut of pragmatics, from the more formal to the more social, and lights the way for future such studies, whether historical or present-day.’

    Jonathan Culpeper - Professor of English Language and Linguistics, Lancaster University

    ‘This book is an impressively comprehensive study that fills a gap in historical research on intensifiers and imparts clarity over this complex and sometimes bewildering area of study. Intensifier usage is explored both descriptively and through a multivariate analysis, allowing the different social factors to be disentangled. The work will certainly provide the groundwork for future studies of the sociopragmatics of courtroom discourse more broadly.’

    Laurel J. Brinton - University of British Columbia, Vancouver

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