scispace - formally typeset
C

Cristina Suárez-Gómez

Researcher at University of the Balearic Islands

Publications -  29
Citations -  165

Cristina Suárez-Gómez is an academic researcher from University of the Balearic Islands. The author has contributed to research in topics: World Englishes & International Corpus of English. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 27 publications receiving 153 citations.

Papers
More filters
BookDOI

Re-assessing the Present Perfect

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors test the hypothesis that a semantic shift from resultative to perfect-anterior meaning can be observed in early English data, based on corpus data from the York-Toronto-Helsinki Parsed Corpus of Old English Prose.
Journal ArticleDOI

The expression of the perfect in East and South-East Asian Englishes

TL;DR: This article studied variation in the expression of perfect meaning in Asian Englishes (Hong Kong, India, Singapore and the Philippines) as represented in the spoken component of the International Corpus of English and found that the tendency of the present perfect to lose ground to the preterite is more pronounced in these New Englishes than in British English.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relative Clauses in Southeast Asian Englishes

TL;DR: The authors examined adnominal relative clauses in Asian Englishes, looking specifically at the distribution of relative words, and compared the varieties spoken in India, Hong Kong, and Singapore, using data from the ICE corpora.
Journal ArticleDOI

The coding of perfect meaning in African, Asian and Caribbean Englishes

TL;DR: In this paper, all the occurrences of ten high-frequency verbs are examined in order to identify how perfect meaning is expressed in all pragmatic contexts, and the results show that the envelope of variation is much wider than the one traditionally acknowledged in current grammars of English and that type of meaning, lexical verb or text type are crucial determiners in the choice of particular forms to express perfect meaning.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the syntactic differences between OE dialects: evidence from the Gospels

TL;DR: In this article, the existence of variation in the syntax of texts belonging to different dialectal varieties in Old English, in particular in relative constructions, has been examined in three versions of the Gospels from late Old English.