Figures
2.3Three levels of the discourse situation for sentences as utterances
2.7Proportions of complementizer omission in three registers of English
2.9Normalized frequencies of that-clauses in three registers
3.1Initial adjuncts as global vs. local signposts in Example (8)
3.2Information status of fronted NP without resumptive pronoun
3.3Topic persistence of pre-clausal NPs in fronting and left-dislocation
3.4Topic persistence of fronting and left-dislocation (proportions)
3.6Proportions of formal types of inversion in two types of discourse
4.5Distribution of long and short passives in different registers
4.8Relationship between length of object and word order choice
4.10Length of intervening NP in V-NP-Part constructions in spoken and written English
4.11Distribution of active and passive voice in transitive verbs in scientific writing
5.2Non-extraposition vs. it-extraposition with different subject clauses
5.3Frequency of given and new information in extraposed subject clauses
5.4Proportions of non-extraposition and extraposition in two registers
5.5Subject clauses with given and new information in two registers
5.6Focus marking and information structure in two types of it-clefting
5.8Information structure within different syntactic types of extraposed clauses
6.4Five adjuncts in student and professional literary criticism
7.4Pronouns in the givenness hierarchy of Gundel, Hedberg & Zacharski
8.3Positions of adverb then in 1,000 attestations from the ICE_GB corpus/spoken component
8.4Final adverbs as discourse markers with different speech acts
8.6Ranking of ten strongly associated combinations of discourse markers
8.9Frequency of actually and in fact in dialog, monolog, and written discourse
8.10Distribution of turn-initial and turn-final position of you know and actually
9.1University genres as conceptually spoken and written language
9.2Scientific argumentation in abstracts from different disciplines
9.3Complexity in noun phrases of academic writing and three other registers