Journal article 1094 views 1553 downloads
Word association research and the L2 lexicon
Language Teaching, Volume: 53, Pages: 1 - 38
Swansea University Author: Tess Fitzpatrick
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DOI (Published version): 10.1017/s0261444820000105
Abstract
Since its modern inception in the late nineteenth century, research on word associations has developed into a large and diverse area of study, including work with both applied linguistic and psycholinguistic orientations. However, despite significant recent interest in the use of word association to...
Published in: | Language Teaching |
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ISSN: | 0261-4448 1475-3049 |
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Cambridge University Press (CUP)
2020
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa53848 |
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2021-01-31T18:15:31.3478194 v2 53848 2020-03-23 Word association research and the L2 lexicon 9597ef45279e137ada70fc75832a45de 0000-0003-0715-9009 Tess Fitzpatrick Tess Fitzpatrick true false 2020-03-23 CACS Since its modern inception in the late nineteenth century, research on word associations has developed into a large and diverse area of study, including work with both applied linguistic and psycholinguistic orientations. However, despite significant recent interest in the use of word association to investigate second language (L2) vocabulary knowledge and testing, there has until now been no systematic attempt to review the wider word association research tradition for the benefit of second language-oriented researchers and practitioners. This paper seeks to address this, drawing together linguistic research from the past 150 years, with a focus on research published since 2000. We evaluate the current state of L2 word association research, before identifying methodological and theoretical themes from a broader range of disciplinary approaches. Emerging from this, new paradigms are identified which have potential to catalyse a new phase of work for second-language word association scholars, and which indicate priority foci for future work. Journal Article Language Teaching 53 1 38 Cambridge University Press (CUP) 0261-4448 1475-3049 21 5 2020 2020-05-21 10.1017/s0261444820000105 COLLEGE NANME Culture and Communications School COLLEGE CODE CACS Swansea University 2021-01-31T18:15:31.3478194 2020-03-23T13:00:35.2471595 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - English Language, Tesol, Applied Linguistics Tess Fitzpatrick 0000-0003-0715-9009 1 Peter Thwaites 2 53848__17328__f320edaea529415b81529c286facaaf9.pdf Fitzpatrick and Thwaites 2020 ~ WA Research & the L2 Lexicon ~ Language Teaching (CUP) ~ 200520.pdf 2020-05-22T07:14:56.9004388 Output 1228633 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true true eng |
title |
Word association research and the L2 lexicon |
spellingShingle |
Word association research and the L2 lexicon Tess Fitzpatrick |
title_short |
Word association research and the L2 lexicon |
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Word association research and the L2 lexicon |
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Word association research and the L2 lexicon |
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Word association research and the L2 lexicon |
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Word association research and the L2 lexicon |
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9597ef45279e137ada70fc75832a45de_***_Tess Fitzpatrick |
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Tess Fitzpatrick |
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Tess Fitzpatrick Peter Thwaites |
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Language Teaching |
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Since its modern inception in the late nineteenth century, research on word associations has developed into a large and diverse area of study, including work with both applied linguistic and psycholinguistic orientations. However, despite significant recent interest in the use of word association to investigate second language (L2) vocabulary knowledge and testing, there has until now been no systematic attempt to review the wider word association research tradition for the benefit of second language-oriented researchers and practitioners. This paper seeks to address this, drawing together linguistic research from the past 150 years, with a focus on research published since 2000. We evaluate the current state of L2 word association research, before identifying methodological and theoretical themes from a broader range of disciplinary approaches. Emerging from this, new paradigms are identified which have potential to catalyse a new phase of work for second-language word association scholars, and which indicate priority foci for future work. |
published_date |
2020-05-21T19:52:58Z |
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11.04748 |