Abstract

Previous research on the INTRODUCTORY IT PATTERN unveiled various lexical and grammatical aspects of its use as a grammatical stance device, including the range of the most frequently used adjectival and verbal stance lexemes, associated stance meanings, the most frequent sub-patterns, and the distinct uses in various contextual settings of the pattern. However, the stance meanings of the pattern, which are deeply rooted in the associated lexical resources, are still understudied. This study explores the meanings of the INTRODUCTORY IT PATTERN by referring to the stance meanings of the pattern associated with the adjectival and verbal lexemes that are statistically attracted to the pattern. The research samples were extracted from the British component of the International Corpus of English (ICE-GB). The samples were manually annotated for different stance types and a collexeme analysis was performed to identify the full range of stance lexemes statistically associated with the INTRODUCTORY IT PATTERN (collexemes). The results show that both adjectival and verbal collexemes are statistically and functionally significant for the delivery of discrete stance types/subtypes. Adjectival collexemes are frequently deployed for all four stance types: Epistemic stance, Evaluation stance, Dynamic stance, and Deontic stance, while verbal collexemes are valuable lexical resources for the Epistemic stance, as their use entails modalized evidentiality, pointing to epistemic judgment of the writer-speaker toward events/propositions. Close examination of the use of adjectival and verbal collexemes identified three fundamental meanings of the INTRODUCTORY IT PATTERN. First, the pattern is inherently evaluative as it tends to attract more lexemes with evaluative meanings and associates evaluative meanings with superficially non-evaluative lexemes. Second, it features a scalarized expression of diversified stance types/subtypes, thus, especially reflective of the scalarized semantic feature of stance expression. Third, it connotates an overwhelmingly positive likelihood judgment. The article concludes by discussing the limitations of this study.

Highlights

  • Guided by previous research findings, we focus our attention on adjectival and verbal predicates as other predicates, including nominal and prepositional predicates, are rarely attested in the INTRODUCTORY IT PATTERN (Mair, 1990; Francis et al, 1996; Kaltenböck, 2000)

  • Our research data suggest that reporting verbs are associated with evaluative meanings when used as collexemes of the INTRODUCTORY IT PATTERN

  • This study investigates how stance is expressed through the INTRODUCTORY IT PATTERN

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The expression of writer-speaker stance is crucial for language use (Biber et al, 1999, p. 966; Du Bois, 2007, p. 139). Corpus approaches to stance focus on lexical and grammatical patterns in academic discourse (Charles, 2003; Hyland and Tse, 2005; Biber, 2006; Chan, 2016; Pérez-Paredes and Bueno-Alastuey, 2019; Vasiliki et al, 2020), academic discourse across languages (Warchał, 2015), and legal genres under different legislative systems (Cheng and Cheng, 2014; Kozbiał, 2020) Under such interests, the range of stance meanings expressed by various stance devices has been discussed. The evaluative evidentiality is addressed as “modalized” evidentiality (Plungian, 2001), where writer-speakers indicate the source of information and express their probability judgment Along this line of modalized evidentiality, verbs of perception can mark indirect evidentiality, as their meanings can extend to the perception of the non-physical/internal world of reasoning or inference (Whitt, 2010, 2011) rather than a direct observation of the physical world. Regardless of the choice of the statistical method, lexemes whose CLSs are above the threshold value are considered significantly attracted to the target slot and are called “collexemes” (Stefanowitsch and Gries, 2003)

Research Procedures
Evaluation Stance
CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATION
ETHICS STATEMENT
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